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'

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, November 14, 2002

www.mydallysentlnr.l.com
BRIDGE

ACROSS
1 i.Jons'

"'"""

No~~~.

A Q0
• AJ
• AJ

ll · lt-1)3

e

.

~

Eut

' .

• II S Z
.. B 7 5 3
.Q!OI 'i

.. K J

.

.. K to 1
• KI8 $ S2
• QUA

· 19

South
AAKJIDiil
• Q i 4

21 " - - no

ldoill"
23 SCiontlll'o
quHtlon
24 Cleon 1 flah
26 Taktto
chair
29 Grode·
ochoolor
30 Ele noay
32 Wodgtup
34 Nimble
36 Murmur
ooothlngly
37 Wyo.
neighbor
38 Goon a
voyage
40 Bubblo42 Stylist'•

... t H

Dealer: South

Vulnerable: North-South
Nnrth
8•

ocquolntod
News·
hawk's

query

-

Wut
Pau

Anewer to Prevloue PUZZle

43 Tempo
45 Conttm.d

sighs
OK

47Nonve~MI

6 Hoardtd
10 Suffused
50 car--...
52 Hord rains
12 Pool
54 Slorchy
14 Dlm111
food
15 ActrestLintbolry
58 Rock
16 Hugo
clinger
59 Sweltering
beings
60 Nolt"tn
18 Got

. ~1\6532

WPI!

Buckeyes bear down for showdown with

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

SOoth
~ A·

•

!

EUI
All pas•

Openin11le1d: • 10

No change

Herd
follower

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 65

Strip of
39 Rooft~l
noed
13 - :"King" 41 Dark nod
· 1 Boaketblll
Cole
44 Exponae
hoop
2 Thurman of 17 Part of the 46 Houoton
atmoephere pro
films
19 Trounce• 47 Spona org.
3 G-man's
20 Nine46 Dutra ol
orv.
heodtd
4 Hotmonator 49 •l Mahar
aundle
follure
5 Wltneaalng 22 Be rude,
alanglly
51 Mako a
6 Toto's
23 Mo. porto
choice
home
25 Mdse. bora 53 Cockney's
7 Soufllo
optimism?
Ingredient 27 Exercise
target
55 Equip
8 Jingle
28 AgrHJ with 56 Aunt, In
9 Painted
31 One of us
· Mexico
tinware
33 "Bien"
57 Strengo
11 Chromoopposite
some
DOWN

12

wood

foil ·

BY PHIWP ALDER
The more things
change, the more they
stay the same · ... or
however that goes in
French.
There have been
35 Sharp bork
letters
goop
STILL CAN'T
chang~s in · bridge
magaztnes over the
GIT WALLY
last 47 years, but
TO COMMIT,
something
never ·
El-l, .)ENNEV
changes: the format
?I
of a declarer-play
problem. This one is
from the ·October
1955 issue of the
Contract Bridge Jour·
nal. You are in six
spades. West leads
the diamond 10. Over
to you.
.
In
1955
and
2002,
a
I'IAVt I~OGI'IU~f
. four-spade opening
AIOVT ·. OIJ~
when vulnerable
against not is the r~al
GA~l&gt;~N 'LVI,
thing. Why'TBecause
if the opponent~ have
BUT ~ 'A/"1 ·
the balance of power,
GIV~ YOIJ
the final contract is
more likely to be four
CELEBRITY CIPHER.
spades doubled than
l-EAfLET.
by Luis Campos
anything else. No one ·
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptograms
are created from Quotalions by famous
will be going to the ·
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.
five-level without a
Today's clue: U equals J
long suit.
Your logical route
"CRWBEWH
E D R ·o S V R L
to 12 tricks is via
seven spades, one
U A P."
N XV C RDLREXV
heart, one diamond
and three clubs. How"CRWBV
ED
L MY
MECCYW
e_ver, your dummy entries must be conGRWHI. RHY
AN
L MY D A I G . "
served. You cannot
1
afford to have the
K R X L M R HXRMRK
~
. heart ace dislodged
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "What separates .lhelalented indi~
from the dummy,
vidual from lhe successf~l one Is a lot of hard work."
~
. which . it mi8.ht be if
- Stephen Kino
L-...LJ.L...--..Il.L..:'-::L...I!.I.--..J.ll.J • 1-...11:=-..L-'------...I West can shtft to that
suit.
WORD
GAM I
The
key
play
is
imN,._TE . I AM 'NOT FOOL.
mediately to cover
r KNOW I ~CORED
LUCKY GOAL. 5UT IT
with dummy's dia- O Regrrgnge fetters of the
H ufi.TS ME THAT YOU
. foc,~r strambled word1 b•
mond jack. -- to keep
CAr&lt;NC'l•T· JusT BE
lew
ta farm four simple words.
West off lead ·- ani!
FOR. ME I
10 discard a club from
E DAC I D
hand. Suppose East 1-_,.:::l~~;:..,.1.:..:.,.:!..;l;-.,:.,lr:;2 -!
switches to a trump.
(Nothing else is betc L._JL-...L......l.-.1....--L.-1
ter.) · Win in hand, . ,
play a club to dum- 1-,-..,.:.:.H..:.A~G..,..P;.-:,R~ ·
my's ace, discard 3 1 1 14 1
your last club on the
· diamond ace, and ruff
"'0
a club high.
The teen ·had gotten several
N0 8 YE I
Are they 4-1? If so,
" traffic tickets so when he came
6
8U'I' W~AT
assume West has the s I I 1 I '"I ' home with one more his irate faAM I 601N6
heart king.
ther scolded . "There is more to life
I
TO DO WIT~
Here, though, con- ·
F I S y 0 S
than increasing irs - • - • • • .. -!"
. ALL Tf.IE
tinue with a spade to 1--....,..,;......y..l..:!."'·la;.....;lr-:.:..1,--j Q Complete the chuckle quoted
~AN6ER5?
dummy's queen and
.
bv filling in the mi.,ing wordo
1
ruff another club
, you develop from stop No. 3 below.
high. Then, draw the
PRINT NUMBERED •
missing trump, cross olft
'1';;11' LETTERS IN SQUARES
to the heart ace, and
cash the six-five of A UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
'1:1 FOR ANSWER
clubs, lhrowing your
remaining' hearts.
S'CRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Finally, note that
Kidnap • Yield- Inlet· Riddle • LIKE IT
any lead but a dia·
"Success has an easy formula," the big executive told
~vr ilEMliM~R. ;.
mond defeats lhe con· the graduating college students. "Do your very best and
A &amp;1GN OF
tract.
/M1URI1Y I~ ~OW
someone may liKE IT."
·

~, _

. FRI~AY, NOVEMBER 15, 2002

Cl\N N'I'&lt;ONC:
TE:U... Mf. Wf.\"-T 1'\
l!&gt;lt:.OUf\N-\1'. IS 7

BIG NATE

I

I
~
~

I
I

www.mydailysenlinel.com

Police chief: Pay up, or go to jail Wood: $8,500
Middleport
would
re·
s
taff
cracks down on . :
Old fl"nes·
de·puties
.

.

·

BY BRIAN J. 8EED .
Staff writer

MIDDLEPORT The
Village of Middleport has
begun efforts to collect
$164,659 in unpaid fines,
and police plan to arresl and
jail those who do not setlle
up.
"The fines are owed by
court order, and state law
says they musl be paid ,"
Police Chief Bruce Swift
said Wednesday. "Fines are
just like any other bill."

Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
said she allows defendants
to mak.e regtl.~r payments
orr fines when r~quested, but
many have farled to pay
anything while others have
failed to mak.e payments as
agreed.
"I don't expect an arm and
a leg. I understand many
people who come into court
and are ordered to pay fines
have families with children
and other obligations,"
Iannarelli said.
.
"I do everything I can to
work. with defendants in
seeing that they are able to
pay their fines in a timely
manner, but ultimately, it's a
bill like any other and must
be paid," she said. ·

"Many of those who owe the chief said.
us fines are repeat offend·
"We're going to lock them
ers," Swift said. "They up, if necessary, to collect,"
almost use the court system . he said Thursday.
like a credit card. It 's nol
lan narelli said she has
fair to the police depart- sent colleclion letters to
ment, the mayor, the tax pay-· some who owe fines and
er or those who are fined in ·will issue arrest warrants on
court and pay their fines as charges .of failure to comply
ordered."
for tho se who do not make
"We know who owes payment arrangements. ·
what, and we'll do whatever
"These funds go directly
we can, legally, to collect inlo the safety fund, which
them ~ "
finances the police departSwift said the police ment operations," Iannarelli
department has suspended said.
.drivers' licenses and fined
"Our funds are low, but
defendants for failure to we have enough 10 make it
comply in order to collect through the year. Think of
fines.
what we could do for our
The police are prepared to residents with $165,000,"
jail those who refuse to pay, she said.
·

Grants ·boost Carleton's capabilities
BY KRIS 5COI!TEN
·Staff writer

A

THE BORN LOSER

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

once

61

Bl

SYRACUSE -· Carleton
School recently received
s~ven Ohio Department of
Education grants totaling
$15,000 to be used in provid·
ing new equipment and 1ech- ·
nology to meet the individual
needs of students with development disabilities.
: Kay Davis, education
director, said the school will
be purchasing a variety of
equtpment to benefit the children, including two commu-·
nication devices to allow stu-·
dent.s with speech delays to
communicate better with
staff;f•ieads-an&amp; f.amrl-y~ -··.
··.•ft'Wilt•1f!'m be getting two
slanders, - which
Davis
described as supportive
equipment that allows physical! y challenged students to
stand upright.
"These help to strengthen
bones and muscles and
allows the children to participate more in the classroom," Carleton preschoolers work on their coidrs with teacher Alicia Shuler.. (Kris Scouten)
·
she said.
. "Another grant has already · and transition.
''Transition students, ages
The preschool program
been used to purchase a spe~ ·we used to have lhree consists of three classes for 14 to 21, work toward exiting
cialized chair that allows one school-age classes, but noy/ children with developmental the school-age program and
student to sit at a table with we're down to two because delays or disabilities, and either entering the adult proclassmates without compro- we had several kids graduate typically developing "peers" gram, Meigs Industries. or
mising his health," she or integrate into the public ages 3 to 5 years.
living independently," she
. "The 'peers' are good role explained.
added.
school system," she said.
Early intervention assists models for the other stu. In addition to those aids,
Their focus is on functionthe schoO.I bought a new children ages birth to 2 years dents ,'' Davis explained. al skills like cooking, vocashopping,
autis!J] software package to and who receive services in"" "They set an ex,!lmple as far tional . skills,
help with language develop· conjunction with the Help as following · directions, money and budgeting.
Me Grow Program.
socialization skills and comment.
Since some of the students
. Carleton serves students
"Participants have a delay I munication. We believe kids do not read, the goal is to
from Meigs, Eastern and or medical condition that has learn a lot from each other." teach them how to navigate
Southern school districts, and a high probability of delay."
The intermediate class has in a literate society and still
had full cooperation from · said Davis.
six students ages 6-13, and be productive, safe and inde·
Students and their care- the emphasis · there is on peildenl, she said.
each district in acquiring the
grants, Davis said.
givers attend once or twice a functional skills. The focu s,
An em~hasis for those 16
· She described the school- week to work on social skills, said Davis, is more on read· and over ts on teaching vocaage ,program as having four speech/physical therapy or ·ing and .math and personal tional skills which can lead
components: Early interven- other areas depending ·on self-bel~ skills like brushing to rec~ving a paycheck, said
their hatr and teeth .
Davis.]
tion , preschool, intermediate individual need.

Bv BRIAN J. REED
Staff Writer

iff's office during those
hours are referred to
·Trussell's home telephone
POMEROY - An addi- number, and he responds to
1ional $8,500 would allow those calls when deemed
24-hour staffi ng of sher- necessary.
iff's deputies through
The six depulies also
year's end, according to work as backup officers for
Sheriff Ralph Trussell'sjail those times when the office
is not staffed.
administrator.
DepUiie·s remaining on
Mony Wood told Meigs
co mmi ssioners staff work two 10-hour
County
Thursday tha.t the addition- shifts · and accumulate
al approprialion would overti~e pay.
allow the recall of two . "Working 10-hour shifts
addtttonal offtcers .to cover is busting us up," Wood
an overmght shtft,. and told commissioners. "If
rehe~e workmg deputtes of there's any way . you can
overttme.
.
f. d h dd. .
I $8 ·soo
Six deputies are now on 10 1 e a t!tona
'
'
staff at the sheriff's depart· some of the ,problems could
ment following .an earl&gt;: be relieved . .
Commtssroner.s took no
October layoff and jar!
closing.
. .
actton on Wood s requ~st
. Since the deputies were Thu~sda~. but have mamlaid off, Tru ssell has been tatned stnce the October
forced to close his office layoffs that no additional
from ' 2 a.m. until 6 a.m. funds will be forthcoming
daily.
for the remainder of 'the
Those who call the sher- year.

CommisSioners
approve additional
public defender costs
state
budget cuts

quar-terly 'Jlt.yments will now
be increasell by $2,291 each,
according lp Mike Westfall,
director of the local office, and
John Alge, administrator of
BY BRIAN J. REED
the
OPD's
office
in
· Staff writer
Columbus, who met with the
· boar\f Thursday.
POMEROY
Meigs
Pomeroy attorneys- usuCounty commissioners signed ally L. Scott Powell and John
a new contract with the Ohio
Public Defender reflecting a Lenles - are appointetl.i'Jf!Y
$4.582 increase in costs the local courts and paid
through June, during their reg- through the public defender's
ular meeting Thursday.·
Alhens office under the terms
Commissioners were noli- of the contract. They represent
tied by letter last week that any . defendant in a criminal
budget cuts· from Gov. Bob ca~e .who is found unable to
Taft would affect state-level afford private counsel.
reimbursement for · public .\ During their business meetdefender services.
mg, commtssroners:
When the commissioners
• Approved transfers in
approved their original funds for lhe county auditor;
$45,792 contract with the
• Paid bills in lhe amount of
Multi-Counly Branch of tl1e $264, 181.36;
Office of the Ohio Public
• Approved a contracl with
Defender, based in Alhens, a Dial
Construction Co.,
reimbursement rate of 41 per- Stockport, for the replacement
cent was anticipated.
of a bridge on Grimm Road.
Instead, that rate was
Present
were
reduced to 33 percent, result- Commissioners
Jeff
ing in an additional cost to the Thornton, Mick Davenport
county.
d
k.
The county's two additional and Jim Sheets, an Cler
Gloria Kloes.

-~'Mtltt··ot

CHEERFU~ ONE
1$1N'fl.li~ACE

OF SETBACKS .. ·

Friday, Nov. 15, 2002
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL •

GAHFIELD
t&gt;A~FI~~P, WHA"!"e
'I'HA'I' NOI~E?

IE~~

ME

11'5 NOf

I

~~

'

......,,

I

..J._L.J._-:1,.,.,~~="'1 IIL-I..-Ll--.1.._

'-J-----~~E~~.M~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~::~=::::J

THE GRIZlWELLS
l"l\\t\&lt;(''Jt.
~oU \3tE:\-\ "

'

IT'S SoRT Cf' UI\E &gt;\OU5E

~\'1_\&lt;:(\'il'

Maintain your lofty ideals
and standards because they
will become the magnets that
attract success for you in the
year ahead. There is great
promise for success.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Deal 'with a matter today that you may have been
avoiding. because e&gt;'en difficult issues can be concluded
easily and to your satisfaction
at this time. Get a jump on
life by understanding the in·
nuences that'll govern you in
the year ahead. Send for your
Astrograph predictions by
mailing $2 and .an SASi; to
Asrrograph. c/o this newspaper. P.O. Bo• 167, Wickliffe,
OH 44092. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21)-- One of xour greatest assets today w1ll be your
ability to express your ideas

with great.clarity. This can be

an "advantage that will work

effectively for you both commercially and socially.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- A financial opportunity
that comes about today
through t~e kindness of another wi ll hav~ long-lasting,

Mothman festival takes flight

Index
beneficial effects. You'll
make the most of it by letting
it work for you. .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19). -- Sprinkle the poinls
you re trytng to make to asso·
ciates today with a touch of
theatrics and they'll be more
easily accepted and remembered. Curtain up.
· PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Although the way
things unfold today may ap·
pear •. bit mysterious, the pos-.
s1btht1es for acquaring some·
thing material you've been
wanting may fall right in your
. lap.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- Give a wide berth to your
imagination today, but be sure
to keep your visionary thinking realistic. When they are
backed up by positive action,
those dreams can become
true.

.

TAURUS lApril 20- May
20) -- Don't be too proud ·to
osk for assistance today from

persons you've helped previ-

ously. especially

tn

matters

that are relevant to your work

or career. They owe you and
want to help.
GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20)
·· Today, when you see a
friend in need. remember the

kind gestures that otherl have
done Tor you and let them inspire you to perform a similarly compassionate act for
someone else.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Today you may achieve
something in which you can
take great personal pride, but
the tooting of the horn should
be done by others, not by you.
Be humble about.your accomplishment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Cooperation and consideration will evoke reciprocal re' sponses in all your dealings
'. with others today. By estab·
&lt;'!ishing the example, shared
assignments become rela-

tively easy.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

--When inspiration strikes today , put it to work for you,

especwlly in areas involving

your work or career. Your

perceptions will enable you to
pick up on things others overlook.
Ll BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It' s al! the nice things you
say and the gracious way you
handle yourself when out with
others today that makes you 1
so popular among your peeF
group. Enjoy the anention,

1 Sections - 16 P•ge•

. Calendar
Classifieds
Comics .
· Dear Abby
· Editorials
·Movies
· Obituaries
. . Sports

AS
BG-7
B8
AS
A6
A3
A3

Staff report'

'

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Point Pleasant
will play host to the first Mothman Festival on
Saturday, some 36 years after the legendary crea·
ture was spotted in the TNT area north of the town.
Saturday's festival will featurt; children's activi·
ties and live entertainment downtown from 10 a.m.
B1,2,4,S
until 6 p.m.
A2
Exhibito(s will sel up booths along Main Street
Weather
Q 2002 Ohio valley Publishing eo.
and Gunn Park and in the former Heilig- Myers
~;.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____. · building.

One of the major points of interest will be the
prop and memorapilia collection owned by two
residents of .Kittanning, Pa., where the film version
of John Keel's book "The Mothman Prophecies"
was filmed. Mothman merchandise will also be on
sale during the .event.
Jeff Wamsley, the owner of Criminal Records
and one of the individuals spearheading the event,
said he has encouraged "anybody and everybody"
to come set up booths and exhibits during the
event.
At 7:30 p.m. , the event will shift to the West
Virginia State Farm Museum. From the museum ,

S~turday

festivql-goers can calch hayrides through the TNT
area, where the Mothrnan was originally spoiled .
Tickels for the TNT tours are $5 for adults and $3
for children under 12. The tickets can be purchased
at the Farm Museum and at many downtown merchants.
Carolyn Harris, another one of the events orga·
ni zers, believes that the event could draw people
from all over the area. and has encouraged Main
Streel merchants to consider holding "Mothman
·
sales" on Saturday. .

Pleas!l see Mothman, Al

·Together we can change .your body.·
And your life.
•
WWW.CCWL.INFO

you deserv~ 11.

•

•

�--

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Friday, November lS, 2002

.

.

Ohio Rep. pulls out of minority
leader race before vote
·

Ohio weather
Saturday, Nov. 16

0

I Toledo j27'135' I

I Manafillcl !31'134' I o

olColuniluo j33'/43' I

•
'

W. VA

KY.

Inc.

0 -·-~··

&amp;my Pt Cloudy Cloo&lt;ly

Rai1

Showers T·•"'""

Snow

Flll!ies

loo

Periods of rain forecast
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cold front extending across
Lake Erie and northwest Ohio
will bring a period of rain to the
area today, with rain mixing
with snow this evening_ as cold
air filters in.
A mix of rain and snow will
continue "' overnight c..a~
Saturday. High pressure building across Michigan saturday
will tend to limit moisture from
reaching the western and far
northern areas of the region. But
with cold air in place, the mercury will struggle to climb out
of the 30s.
The main weather system to
affect the area this weekend is
the low pressure system that
will track up the eastern
seaboaid. This northeaster will
increase the winds over the state
ad
·
ba k
and spre mOisture c over
·the region. ·
·
· The track and strength of the
· system will . determine how
mu~h precipitation will fall.
Once this system exits off to
the northeast, high pressure will
build in and bring fair weather
to the area on Monday.
Weather forecast:
· Tonight...Occasional rain.
· Lows near 40. Northeast winds

5 to J0 mph. Chance of rain 80 ,
percent.
Saturday... Periods of rain.
Cooler with highs in the mid
40s. North winds 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Saturday night. .. Ooudy with
a chance of rain showers, then a
chance of snow or rain showers
late. No accumulation expected.
Lows in the mid 30s. Chance of
precipitation 50 percent.
Extended forecast:
Sunday...Cloudy with a
chance of snow or rain showers.
No accumulation· expected.
Colder. Highs in the upper 30s.
Chane 0·f
· · · 50
e prec•p•tatton
percent.
·
. Sunday night. .. Partly cloudy
with a chance of snow showers.
Lows in the upper 20s. Chance
of snow 30 percent.
Monday... Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 40s.
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s and highs
in the upper 40s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s and highs
in the lower 50s.
Thursday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s and highs
in the upper 40s.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Nov. 14, 2002

Jones
Pet chanoe

. tromprevious~

-A-U7
G~
. -s=e=P---=-oc=r:--""'No"'v,-- 7•000

+1 .71

High

Low

8,545.11

8,403.69

Record high:

1~

,722.98

Jan.)4, 2000

Nov. 14, 2002

1,600

Nasdaq
compos1t
+50.111 .

1,411 .52

--::---=::::-:-=:--'-c::::c-AUG

SEP

High

Pd. change

+3.69

from previous:

OCT

Low

NOV

1,000

Record high: 5,048 .62

1,411.63 . 1,376.94

March 10,2000

Nov. 14, 2002

·

1,000

Standard
&amp; Poor's

900 .
BOO

' +21.74

904.27
Pet. change
, fromprevious

+2.46

AUG

SEP

High

Low

904.27

882.53

OCT

NOV

Federal Mogul - .56
USB- 21.13
Gannolt- 76.56
General Eloctric - 24.50
GKNLY -3.55
Harley Davidson - 50.74
Kmart - .59
Kroger- 13.83
Ltd.- 15.63
NSC- 21
OakHII Financial-2t .18
OVB -20.50
BBT -36.37
Peoples- 28.69
Pepsico - 44.25
Premier -

7

COLUMBUS (AP)
Twenty-six Ohio· col'lege
students
working
in
Washington as interns have
learned they're not going to
get the state scholarship
money they were anticipating.
The Ohio Board of
Regents said th.at more than
a year ago, it told the
Washington Center, which
sponsors the internship program, that state budget cuts
eliminated the scholarship
fiiiicl:-But the center says 1t
didn:t
know
until
September.
"Up until the day I left, I
was told I was going to be
getting the $2,000," said
Kathryn Staczek, an Ohio
State University senior and
an intern for the National
Republican Congressional
Committee.

But when she arrived in
Washington on Aug. 28, the
Ohio Capitol Scholarship
money wasn't ·waiting for
her.
Staczek said the center, a
nonprofit
organization,
informed the studen~s by emai I on Oct. 25 that they
wouldn't be getting the
money.
"A lot of people were
counting on that, and some
may have to leave," she said.
Avys Hardison, a senior at
the University of Toledo, is
among those people.
"My mother had to charge
$1,700 on a credit card the
day I moved in" so Hardison
could cover living expenses,
she told The Columbus
Dispatch in a story published Friday.
In past. years, the state has
provided as much as

lor of the regents, said unjversities are trying to find
· funding for the program aDd
the regents might be able to
reimburse them later if
money is left over fro!"
other scholarship programs. ·
However, it won't know
about any surplus for
months.
Staczek said Ohio State
heard about the problem and
scrambled to find her fum!ing. But other students aren't
sure whether their universities will pick up the tab. ·
· The Washington Center
was founded in 1975 and
coordinates thousands of
internships for college students across the nation,
according to its ·Web site.
Students pay college tuition,
a program fee and living
expenses and receive course
credit for the internships.

•

Correction
Rockwell - 19.64
Rocky Boots- 4.80
AD Shell - 43.73
Sears - 22.78
Wai·Mart- 55.57
Wendy's- 28.74
Worlhington - 17.71
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
cif

$250,000 for the programenough for 125 scholarships
of $2,000 each.
''The Washington Center
people knew the scholarships weren't funded" this
academic · year,
said
Roderick Chu, chancellor of
the regents. ''They proceeded withol)t consultmg with
us."
A letter to Chu from the
center on OCt. 18 said, "We
at the center first learned of
this problem Sept. 9 in a
voice mail from the scholarship office of the Ohio
BoardofRegents-10days
after the students arrived,
·moved into our housing,
underwent orientation aild
started their internships."
Ohio owes the center
.$52,000, according to the
letter.
Rick Petrick, vice chancel-

Republicans propose. higher cap for injury awards:·
.

AP

quotes

Each minority leader candidate got 15 minutes i'o
speak at a leadership meeting Thursday that W'IS
closed to the public.

700

Local Stocks
AEP - 26.85
Arch Coal - 18.04
Akzo- 29.43
AmTech/SBC - 24.40
Ashland Inc. - 25
AT&amp;T- 13.67
Bank One- 38.08
BLI - 14.22
Bob Evans - 24.21
BorgWarner - 45.93
Champion - 2.55
Charming Shops - 4.40
City Holding - 28.70
Col - 20.94
DG - 14.19
DuPont - 42.78

.

move the rank-and-file citizen back into the political
process. The majority of
them are now sitting on the
sidelines," she said.

Students not getting state scholarships

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

I.

Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio, gestures during a Capitol HOI
news conference where she began a last-minute race to
become House Democratic leader. Kaptur will challenge frontrunner House Minority Whip Nancy Pelosi of Calif. and Rep.
Harold Ford Jr., 0-Tenn. (AP)

COLUMBUS (AP) - Grendell said he wanted law- address doctors' complaints
The Democrats' ·plan
House Republicans have makers to address the issue over soaring . malpractice would give judges. more
introduced legislation to cap "in a manner that has the insurance rates.
power to crack down on frivmedical malpractice awards highest likelihood of being
For exampie, Dr. Scott olous lawsuits and create :a
at $1 million, an increase maintained and, found consti- Hockenberry, a Columbus commission to monitor me&lt;!over the $300,000 limit pro- tutional."
traum&amp; surgeon, told law- ical · malpractice rates in
posed in a sifnihu Senate bill.
House
and
Senate makers Thursday morning he Ohio.
Rep. Tim Grendell said .the Democrats introduced their had to borrow $75,000 this
The Ohio State Medical
Senate bill's strict caps could own medical malpractice leg- year after seeing his rates Association, which backs the
be unconstitutional because islatioil Thursday, saying the jump from $25,000 to · caps, said it could likely supjurors could not award an Republican bills restrict the $100,000.
port Grendell's 15ill. The Ohio
amount they think is fair, rights of victims to collect
Under Grendell's plan, Academy of Trial Lawyers,
which would infringe on · damages without holding the injured patients could go to however, still opposes caps . .
Ohioans' right to a jury trial. insurance industry responsi- trial with the understanding
Grendell's bill is more
Grendell gets around this ble for high rates.
the.ir awards will be. subject "consumer friendly," but
The Democrats' · plan . to the mandatory cap.
"our position is there's no
problem by · giving victims
the option of seeking whatev- would revive a . state fund
If they reject that approach, better group of people to
er damages they want, but eliminated 10 years ago that they can seek whatever decide damages than a jury
requiring judges to lower the acts as an insurer of last amount they want with the that hears all the evidence in
award to the cap after the jury resort for Ohio doctors and understanding the judge will a specific case," said Richard
medical facilities.
reduce the final award to the Mason, the academy's execuissues its decision .
After hours· of research.
The bills are trying to cap- or order a new trial.
tive director.

10,000

Dow
8,542.q

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Ford of Tennessee to succeed
Ohio Rep. Marcy Kaptur was Dick Gephardt of Missouri.
When Kaptur entered the
looking for a way to get
Democratic ·U.S. House lead- · race Wednesday morning, she
ers to listen to her ideas for acknowledged she probably
party reform.
wouldn't win, but said she
Her solution was . to was running to try to open up
announce she would run for the party to all members'
House Democratic leader ideas.
about 24 hours before the
"We peed less top-to-bot-.
election by the 204 caucus tom control and more bottommembers. After she got 15 up infusion into the party,"
· minutes to present her plat- she said. "We need to empowform of reform, she withdrew er the non-money wing of our
from the race just before the Democratic caucus."
vote Thursday.
Kaptur argued Democrats
. "I succeeded in being able sho11ldn't try to compete with
to present my ideas before the Republican fund raising
caucus," ·said Kaptur, a I 0- .because they never will win a
term congresswoman from money contest. Instead, the
Toledo, Ohio. "I was ovet- party should focus on being a
joyed at the reception. People voice for workers in hard
were listening."
economic times and encourCalifornia Rep. Nancy · age . voter participation
Pelosi was elected minority among groups that tradition,
leader, becoming the · first ally
have
voted
for
woman to lead either par1y in Democrats: the poor, minoriCongress. With a 177-29 vote. ties' and women.
Pelosi defeated Rep. Harold
"We're really trying to

the previous

It was incorrectly
reponed ·in Thursday's
Daily Sentinel · that
Larry . and Carolyn
Little had received a
check from American
Electric Power for the .
sale of their home . The
Littles, and noile of the

other participants in the
buyout, have not yet
received payment from ,
AEP. . The Tribune
regrets . the error and
apologizes for · an:y
inconvenience it may
have caused.

day's transactions, pro·
vided by Smith Parlners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

\

The Heart Healthy Coalition
would like to welcome
Meigs High School Student Council
Members to the Coalition.
Together by promoting nutrition
and physical activity, we can
improve the heart health of the staff
and students at Meigs High School.
The Heart Healthy Coal~ion

~======!::::=:=====~-.

Please complete a community survey by sharing your opinions, ideas, questions
. and/or concerns regarding health care and oilr facility. Surveys can be picked-up in the

All of the surveys should be ~eturncd on or before Monday, December 2, 2002.
Your involvement is truly appreciated and will assist us in better serving you - our patients.

•

•

..

·Obituaries
Morris E.
Haskins

at Hickory Creek Nursing
Center in The Plains.
She was born in Athens on
December 26, 1930, daughter of the late Clyde V. and
Mabel Sargent Smith.
She was a retired elementary school teacher.
A 1948 graduate of ·
Hamden High School, she
received her B.S. in education from Ohio University.
She had retired from
· Alexander Local School
System, having previously
taught at Eastern Local.
She was a member of
Alb
Ch
N 558
any
apter o.
O.E.S. and O.E.S . Tularosa,
. New Mexico, Lodi .Grange
and Athens Grange, Ladies
Oriental Shrine of Aladdin
Temple in Columbus and
Good Sam Camping Club,
Chapter 64 in Zaleski.
Surviving are her hus-

GALLIPOLIS _ Morris
E d ward
Haskins,
90, died
Thursday.
November
14, 2002,
at
his
home.
T h e
G a 11 i a
County
na ti ve
•
Haskins
attended
·:
.
Marietta
:College, served as a second
:~eutenant in the Ohio State
.c; rd
t
'd t
• ua ' ·was pas pres• en
·and chauman of the board of
:Ohio Valley Bank, one of the
~founders of the Bob Evans
.Farms Company, owner and
manager of Haskins Tanner
·men's clothing store, past
· Rotary Club president and
·Paul Harris Fellow, served as
a director of the Gallipolis band, John Romine of
Area Chamber of Commerce Athens; a daughter, Karen
:and a President's Associate Strausbaugh of Las Vegas,
' of Cedarville College.
Nevada;
stepdaughters,
· ·. He was a member of First Sharon (Sid) Smith of
·· Baptist Church, served on Shade, and Patricia Setty of
· the Board of Trustees for Albany; . stepsons. John
many years, and was Trustee
·d
·Emeritus at the time of his (Mary) Romine and DavJ
death.· .
(Virgie) Romine, both of
. He was the son of the late Alamogordo, New Mexico,
Ratti~ . Morris and James and
Kenneth
(Cathy)
Lewis Haskins. He was pre- Romine of Columbus; 15
ceded in death by his wife, stepgrandchildren, 12 step·Dorothy Wallace Haskins; a great-grandchildren and one
:grandson; . David Morris step-great~great grandchild.
:wedge; and a sister, Virginia · She is .also survived by a
·
' Katherine HOod.
·.: Survivors include a daugh- brother, Veri (Carolyn)
•fer, Carol Haskins Wedge Sm'ith of Lancaster; her
·and her hlisband, Denny aunt, Fern Sadosky of Fort
'Wedge, of Bowling Green, Thomas, Kentucky; a brothKentucky; a granddaughter, · er-in-Iaw, Jim Jeffers of
Julia Wedge Spencer and her Shade; foster nieces and
'husband, · Michael · George . nephews, Jim (Debbie)
'Spencer, of Davie, Florida; a Jeffers, Debbie (Jeff) White ,
.grandson, Paul D. Wedge III Joe Jeffers an. d Jeff Jeft.ers,
·and his wife, Jody Hackbart
Wedge
of
Louisville, all of Shade; and a special
Kentucky; and four great- friend, Vicki Rhodes of ·
·grandsons, Michael George Shade.
;Jx., Paul David and Matthew · In addition to her part;nls,
:Morris Spencer, and Paul she was preceded in death
Baylor Wedge.
by her husband, Kenneth
11
'· Services will be
a.m. Strausbaugh, in 1987; and
. Monday, . November 18,
.2002, . at ... First Baptist her foster sister, Sylvia
·&lt;i:hurch, with Pastor Marc Jeffers.
:Sarrett and Pastor Alvis
Services will be 1 p.m.
Pollard officiating. Burial . Sunday, Novemb.er 17, 2002
will follow in Mound Hill at lagers and Sons Funeral
·Cemetery. Visitation will be Home in Athens, ·with
from 2 to 4 and 6 to .8 &amp;m Minister Willard Love offiSunday, November 17, 2 2• ciating. Burial will follow at
at the church.
.
In lieu of flowers, the fam- Burson Cemetery.
ily requests memorials sent
Friends may call at the
'to the Morris and Dorothy funeral home from 2 to 4
'Haskins Ariel Theatre, First and 7 Jo 9 p.m. Saturday,
.l':laptist Church Building November 16, 2002.
Fund, Ohio Valley Christian
Albany Chapter O.E.S.
·school or Holzer Hospice. · No. 558 will hold memorial
'
- Paid notice
·services at 4 p.m. Saturday,
November 16, 2002.
Memorial contributions
may be made to the
American Heart Association
. . • ATHENS - Twila Jean Ohio Valley Affiliate, P.O .
Strausbaugh, 71, of Athens,
.died late Thursday after- Box 182039, Department 13,
·noon, November 14, · 2002, Columbus, Ohio 43218.

twila
.Strausbaugh

- Paid notice

..

'

'

:oeaths
Martha
..Grueser
·: RACINE
Martha
:Grueser, Racine, died
'Thursday, Nov. 14, 2002, at
tiolzer Medical Center.
• Arrangements will be
announced
by
Fishe.r
:Funeral
Home
.
'
'

:catherine
Welsh
•
:: POMEROY- Memorial
•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Open house celebrates
home health care
Staff writer
POMEROY Holzer
Hospice Meigs Branch,
Holzer Home Care Pomeroy
Branch and Holzer E11tra
Care Pomeroy Branch celebrated national Home Health
Care and Hospice month
with an
open house
Thursday.
The three entities gave visitors health information.
facility tours and refreshments as well as · glucose,
cholesterol. and blood pressure screenings.
. Holzer Home Care has
been a Medicare cenified
home health agency that
serves southeastern Ohio and
Mason County, W.Va .. for
more than 30 years.
''The services we provide
include skilled nursing,
physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy and home health aides
who assist in personal care,"
said Paula Eiehinger, branch
manager.
"Holzer Hospice is a
licensed, certified hospice
program that provides services in the home and in contracted nursing home agencies, like Overbrook and
Rocksprings, to patients with
life-limiting illness and their
families," said Sue Bowers,
Holzer Hospice director.
The program provides

services will be held for
Catherine L. Raub Welsh at
10:30 a.m. Saturday, Nov.
16, 2002, at . Sacred Heart
Church in Pomeroy. with
the Rev. Father Walter E.
Heinz officiating.
Mrs. Welsh was a member
of the Democratic Party, the
Catholic Women's Club,
Women's Auxiliary of the
VFW, and the Women 's
Auxiliary of The Fraternal
Order of Eagles.

offered

Sandra Peyton gives patient Thornas Tucker a free glucose
test at the Holzer Hospice Meigs Branch, Holzer Home Care
Pomeroy Branch and Holzer Extra Care Pomeroy Branch open
house Thursday. Also pictured are Paula Eichinger, Holzer
Home Care branch manager, and Paula Gaul of Holzer
Hospice. (Kris Scouten)
medical symptom management by the patient's attending physician in conjunction
with an .interdiscip~inary
team of sk11led practitiOners
and volunteers.
"We have nurses and aides
working out of this office so
we can respond quickly to
our patient and family
needs," she added.
"We pick liP where the
other two agencies leave off.
We offer a variety of person-

.

VALLEY
HOSPITAL
'

_ _.._ _ _!:___ __ __ _ _ ______ _ ;_ _ _

•

al care, homemaking and
housekeeping
services,"
added Vickie ·Nottingham,
director of Holzer Extra
Care.
The services are available
to anyone who could use a
little extra help around the
house. A doctor's order is not
required to obtain the services.
· All three agencies are
located at· 113 E. Memoria:!
Drive, Pomeroy.

t

Farmers Ban~ and Savings
Co. against Jeffrey M.
Stethem, and others, has
· been dismissed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court.
Sentenced
POMEROY
Rick
Marshall was sentenced to
18 months · in prison on a
1997 charge of theft of
service, based on a motion
to revoke community control filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Marshall was given credit
for 13 months served.
The charge is a fourthdegree felony.

Holzer;
8:42 p.m., Mulberry.
Avenue, Dolores Goode,
Pleasant Valley. ·
POMEROY
1:03 p.m ., West Main
Street, Sabrina Tenant,
refused treatment. ·

Injury reported
RACINE - A Racinearea youth was injured in a
two-vehicle
accident
Wednesday on Ohio Route
338, the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
Joshua T. Smith, 15,
Dissolutions
23798 Hill Road, was
POMEROY - Actions
transported to Holzer
for dissotution of marriage
Medical Center by private
have been filed in Meigs
vehicle following t)le 3:10
Emergency calls
County Common Pleas
p.m.
accident, the patrol
POMEROY -· Units of
Court by William B. Slack, Meigs
· Emergency reported .
Middleport, and Jennifer Services answered the folTroopers said Smith was
S.
Slack,
Pomeroy; lowing calls for assistance a passenger in a car driven
,Ladona G. Boyd · and . Thursday:
· by Christopher M. Roush,
. James W. Boyd, both of
CENTRAL DISPATCH 1(i, 23979 Hill Road,
Shade; and Roger Lee
3:31 a.m., Middleport Racine, that was east- .
Murphy and Joy Lynn Police, . Raymond Klein, bound, .02 miles east of
of Holzer Medical Center;
Murphy,
both
Letan Township Road 214
Reedsville. ·
8:5 1 a.m., Minersville (Plants) when Roush
Hill, Martha . Grueser, attempted to ovenake and
Case dismissed
pass a pickup truck ahead
Holzer;
POMEROY - A fore12 :27 p.m., Overbrook of him driven by Zachary
closure suit filed by Center, Charles Butler R. Pickett, 17, 22759
, Riverfront Drive, Racine.
· Holzer;
.
Pickett . swerved left,
12:57 p.m., West Main
Street, motor vehicle acci- causing Roush's car to
dent, Shirley Frazier, Mary travel off the left side of
Phillips, Ava McHaffie, the road. Roush lost control of the car, went off the
refused treatment;
OHIO
right side of the road and
1:53
p.m.,
Country
Pick 3: 8-7-7
Mobile Home Park, Elmo struck a guardrail, the
Pick 4: 2·2·7·9
Pierce, Pleasant Valley report said .
Supellotto: 10.29-30-32·35-48
. Roush's car was severely
Hospital;
Bonus Ball: 31 .
damaged,
and Pickett was
7:48
p.m.,
Hysell
Run
Kicker: 8-0-2·5·9-4
Road,
Cora
Folmer, cited for left of center.
Buckeye 5: 4· 1D-16-3D-33
Pick 3 night: 8·9·2
Pick .4 night: 5-4-0-4
Daily l: 2-3-1
Dally 4: 7-5-4-6

Reader Services
co·rrectlon Polley
Our main Concern in all stories Is to be
accurate. If you know of an error In a
story, call Ihe n.Wsroom al (740) 992'

2156.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.
Oepartmen1 extensions are:

'.

News

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext..t2

.M
. ain Street crash
-.causes injury

Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Kris Scouten, Ext. 13

Sports: Derek Taylor, Ext. 14

Trustees
to meet
LETART FALLS- Letart
Township Trustees will meet
at 5 p.m. Monday at the
office building.

livestock

report
GAlLIPOUS - United
Producers Inc. market report
from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder CattJe.Higber
275-415# St $85-$93 Hf.
$80-$88 425-525# si. $78$85 Hf. $70-$78 550-625#
St. $7 5-$86 Hf. $68-$77
650-725# St. $70-$77 Hf.
$62-$70; 750-850# St. $67·
$74 Hf. $55-$67.
Fed Cattle
(Second Wednesday of the
month)
· Choice- Steers, $64-$66;
heifers, $62-$65
Select - Steers, $57-$60;
heifers, $54-$58
Holsteins - Steers, $48$57
Cows-Steady
Well
Muscled/Fleshed
$29-$32; Medium/Lean $25$30;
Thin/Light $15-$20; Bulls
$36-$48
Back To The Fann:
Cow/Calf Pairs $500$630; Bred Cows $185$600; Baby Calves $5-$260;
Goats $10-$80.
Call the office at 446-9696.

Moth man
from PageA1
Harris has a notebook with
five pages full of names of
people who have stopped in
her restauran(, Harris'
Steakhouse, looking for
information
on
the
Mothman. ·
Keel, . who popped into
Point Pleasant in October,
said t)Jat the idea of a
Mothman festival was a
good one for a city hoping to
use tourism to boost its economic base. Whether or not
Keel wiU appear at the event
was unknown at presstime.
Mothman was originally
sighted in November 1966.

· · · · Advertising

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing C'o.
Published every a1ternoon ,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
class postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Oh io Newspaper
Association .

Postmaster: Send address correc·
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Courl Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month ............'9.95
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Outside Sales: Davel;larris, Ext. 15
Outside Sales: Jessica Evans, Ext. 16 advance direct to The Daily
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10
Sentinel. No subscription by mail

'

on Main Street and turned
left into the path of
Phillips ' ve hicl e
while
attempting to enter Crow's
Family Restaurant.
Frazier ' s vehicle had
heavy . damage
while
Tennant 's car was moderately damaged. There were
no injuries.
Tennant was cited for
:w.va:
Tennan,t was eastbound fa ilure to yield.

MIDDLEPORT
Elizabeth Schaad of Edward
Jones Investments will present "Weathering a Bull
Market" at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center, from 7 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday.
Schaad will discuss what a
bull market is and how to
better invest money during
economically-trying times.
The seminar is free and open
to the public.

The Daily Sentinel

W.VA.

•

POMEROY - Pomeroy
:Police Chief Mark E.
:Proffitt
reported
that
:Shirley Frazier, Middlepqrt
. was driving a 1994 Chevy,
• : _ :Owned by Mary E. Phillips,
·.:: · ' :West on Main Street about
&gt;1 p.m. Thursday when she
was struck by a white
Sunfire driven by Sabrina
J. Ten'nant of New Haven,

Plan
clinic

Seminar

For the Record .
Marriage licenses
. POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued
in Meigs County Probate
Court to Donald Wayne
Shaffer, 26, and Tiffany
Dawn Lonas, 23, both of
Racine; Jay Anthony
Blackwood, 31, Pomeroy,
and Christy Dawn Drake,
24, Racme; Timothy
William Willis, 33, and
Rachel Roxanne Harter,
18, both of Racine; and
Dennis Joseph McPherson,
· 25, and Toni Sue Smith,
26, both of Pomeroy.

Local briefs
POMEROY Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood
immunization clinic from 9
to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m.
Tuesday at the health department office. Parents must
accompany each child and
bring shot records. A $5 fee
will be charged.

BY KRIS ScoUTEN

Lotteries

•

'

Pleasant Valley Hospital is planning for the future and needs your assistance!

Office Building or visit us at http://survey.l:csd.wvu.edufpvh.

www.mydallysentinel.com

'

AND THE SUR EY SAYS.•.
following locations: .Main Lobby, Emergency Care Center, Wellness Center, Medical

· Friday, November 15, 2002

Class./Circ.: Cynthia Swisher, Ext. 11

Circulation
District Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ext. t7

!11! !MTA ClAII!! 2T1:l0,1:20,7:20,
~m: Theile!~ "1"" 2:00,1:3!. 7:20,10:10
1111!1
1:25,9:!0

"='

ALL AGES , ALL TIMES $4.00

General Manager

Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

Potter Tickets will go on
sale at5:30 pm Fri. Sat. lo
Sun. Matinees Tickets on sale
at11 :30 am Sat &amp; Sun.

E-mail:
nt:iws@mydailysentinel.com
Web:

www.mydailysentinel .com

permitted in areas where home
carrier servk:e is available.

·"I'

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
" 13Weeks ......... '30.1 5
26 Weeks ... .......... '60.00
52 Weeks . . .......... ' 11 6.80
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26Weeks ............ '100.10
52 Weeks .... . .......'200.20

�Paae A4 • The Dally Sentinel
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992-5898
Pastor. R~v. Walttr E. Heinz

f-'a ~ tvr

PJ. Chapman
Sund.. ~ Sd'IQo)) - 10 J.m
Worshrp · I ! a.m
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Sat. Coo. 4:4S-5: 1Sp.m.; Mus- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45-9: I5 a.m.,

Clourdl ol J-

ClorillApodllli&lt;
VanZand&amp; and Ward Rd.
Pasloc James Miller
Sunday Xhoot - 10:30 a.m.

Hrmlock Grv'e- Christia• Ch•n:h

AposiOhc Worship Cenkr
87] S. 3rd Ave .. Middleport

Ministt:r. Larry Drown

Ke\'in Konkle, Pastor
Sunday. 10 a.m. and 6 :00p.m.
Wedrksday. 7:30p.m.; Youlh Fri. 7.30 p.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Siblt Srudy - 7 p.m.

5ttond &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Jack Nobk
Wonbip I o: ~ a.m.
Sunday School 9: 15 a.m.

Won.hip - 9:30a.m.

GI'IK'r Epistopal Church

212 W. Main St.
Ministrr: Anthony Monis
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sef\·ices: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.
. Thurs. 7:00p.m.
PastUJ Marty R. Hunon

R~ v.

1\hw n, W.Va.
Neil Tennant
Sunda) S..· n·tcl!S- 10:00 a.m . and 1 p.m.
Pa~tur :

Middleport Cburdo ol Christ
5th and MaiD

Bapli'-1
Hope Baplisl Churrh iSouthml)
· 57o' Gram S1., Middlepon
P11stur. Rev. David Bl)'an

Pas1or: AI Hartsoo
You1h ,\-finister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship- M:15. 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.

S_unday school - 9:30a.m.
W•lrshlp - l l a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen•ice - 7 p.m.

Keoo Chufth or Christ
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 1 0:~ a.m.
Pastor-Jeffn=y Wallace
l ~ t and Jrd Sunday

Sullday Schoo l - 9:30a.m.

Worship - I0:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert
Ea.~ t Main -St.

fin~t

Southtrn B11ptist
-HIH::! Pomeroy Pi k ~

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor~ hip - S: IS a.m.• 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.
w~,.xJncsday Services - 7:00p.m.

•'in;t Baptist Church
P ~~ t or: ·Mark Morrow
fl lh and Palmer Sc., Middleport
Sunday Sc hOQI - 9:15a.m.
· Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
\\'edncsday Sel'\lice- 7:00 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pas1or: John Swanson

Mt. l Jninn Raptlsl
Pa.'itor : Dav id Wiseman
Sunday School-9:45'a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wcdne~da y Services- 6:30p.m.

UnpviUe Christi•~ Chun::h

Pastor: Robert Musse r
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
• WetlrJCsday Servke 7:30 p.m.

Reed.n iile Church.ofChrist .
Pastor: Philip Slurm
S ~ nday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Sel'\lice: 10:30 a.m.
· Bible Study, Wednesday, 6: 30 p.m.

Viclol')' Baptist lndependenl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: J ~;~ m es E. Keesee
Worship- JOa. m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Dt:1:ter Church of Christ
Pastor: Bill Eshelman
Sunday sc hool9 ~3 0 a;m.
Norman Will. superintendent
Sunday wors~p - 10:30 a.m.

Faith Bapdst Church
Railroitd St., Million
Sur1t.hty S~ hool - 10 a.m.
Worshi p- I I a. m., 6 p. m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Churth of Christ
Intersection 7 IUid 124 W
Enngelist Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study - 9:)0 a .m.
Wor:ship: 10:30 a.m. and 6: 30-p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Forest Run Bapdsl
Pas tor ; Arius Hun
Su~day School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

( 'lrri-,tiarr I niorr

8e~11ny

Pastor:.Dewayne Stutk r
Sunday School - 10 a.rri.
Wnrsh ip · 9 a. m.
Wedne sdaYServices· 10 a:m.

Carmei-Sunon
Cannel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pustur: Dewayne Stutler
Su nday School - 9:30 ;_ rn_
Worship - !0:45a. m..
l:lible Study Wed . 7:00p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: Dewayne S'tutlei"
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

I . ulhl·r·an
Pi ne Grove

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Wal nut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood.
W.Va.
Pastor: Da vid Russell
Sunday SdJoo l - 10:00 a.m.
Worship · i I a. m.

SL Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Po mef9 y

Graham Unlled Metbodiil
Worship -9:30a. m. (1 st &amp; 2nd Sun),

Hartfo rd, W. Va
Pastor:David Greer
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednn day Services · 7:00p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesvill e
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

992·3978

m:raforb
l\ral (f~tatr
.

:1118 E1Second Pomeroy
7~2-3325

Marketing Property
Since 1971

11-JU#Ief.al ";itD--e
?''

174 Layne Street
New Haven. WV 25265
IJarnes H. Anderson 30'·~-8112·112001
Dir•••or
~·'
304·882-821

Ton:h Church
Co. Rd . 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parhih
Northeast Cl u*r
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Reauie
Sunday School - ?:30 a.m.
Worship - ! 1 a.m.. 6:30p.m.

'\i &lt;ll&lt;ll"l'IH'
Middleport Chun:h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30a.m·.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Se r\-·k es- 7 p.m
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Chester
Pas10r: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday Schoo l - 10 a. m.
Th u ~ day Serv ices - 7 p.m.

Reedsville Fellowship
Churc h of the Nazarene
Pastor: TereSa Waldeck
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wors hip · 10:45 a. m., 7 p.m
W~dn es day Serv ices - 7 p. m

• .

Joppa
Pas1or: Bob Randolph
Worshi p - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Schoo l - 10:30 a.m.

Syracuse Chun:h or the Nazartne
Pastor Mike Adkins

Long Bottom
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m .
Wor~i p - 10:30 a.m.
Reedsville

.:fillbrr .:funrral _,omr

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.• 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday S(,: hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
· Wed 11esdny Serv ic es- 7 p.m.

JUIU-1444

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. M~tln
. 992-5130
Pomeroy
"Let y()ur light so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works ami glorij)&gt; your
Fath er in Heaven."
Mal thew 5: 16

Full Gospel Church ollhe Living Sa.vior
Rt .338, Antiqu ity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.
Salem Community Church
. Li e,•ing Road , Wes t Columbi11. W.Va.
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday Sc hool 9:3 0 am
Sunday even ing sm·ice 6 pm
Wednegduy St:rvice 7 pm

Abundant Gract R.F. I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesduy service. 7 p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowship Church ~
Pslor: Hel'l'iChel White
·
Sunday School- 10 am
,Sunday Church service - 6:30 pm
Wcdhesday 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottorp
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday S~hool - 9:30a.m.
.Worship - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. •
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Resloration Chris1ian Fe llowship
9365 Hooper Ro!KI, Ath ens
Pastor: .Lonnie Couts
Sund11y Worship 10:30 am
Wed sda 1 •

Tht Believen' Fellow~bip Ministry
Ne w Lime Rd ., Rutland
Pa stor: Rev. Margare t J. Robinson
Ser11iccs: Wednes day, 7:30 p.li;J .
Sunday. '2:30 p.m.

l'l'll h •ro.-.1 a I
Pentec:ostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124. Raci ne
Pas10r: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

H11rrison\'llle Community Chun:h
Paslc;tr: Theron Durham
Sunday-9:3 0 a.m. b.nd 7 ·p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Mlddlepo~

Community Church
St. , Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
E11en ing- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30 p.m.
P~rl

l'rt~h\

tnian

Syracuse First United Pmbyltrian
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship - II a.m

Fallh Valley Tllibernacle Church

Harrlsoavllle Presbyterian Churctl
Pa ~ tor: Robert Crow
Worship · 9 a.m.

Ingel's Carpet
169 N 2nd AVe.
Middleport, OH

992-7028

I'

Middleport Presbyterian
Pustor: R,ober Crow.
Worship - IQ a.m.

Hazel Community Churth
OITRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7: 30p.m.

Sennth-Day Aduntht
Mulben)· Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinslcy
Sarurday Serv ices:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
w h' l

Dyesvllle Communily Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

. .

I

· Mone Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Worship .· I 1 a.m.
Wednesd~y Service · 7 p.m.

11 i ll'd

B rl'l h rt n

Faith GO!!ipel Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p,m,
Wedne~day 7: 30p.m.

Mt. Hermon Unlltd B~lhren
in Christ Churdl
Texas Community 36411 Wickham Rd
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7: 00p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\lkes - 7:00 p.m.

ML Olive ComJI'unJty Church

Eden Unlltd Brethren In Chrbn

Pas tor: Lawrence Bush
Suriday School · 9:3 0 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

State Route 124, Reedsvil le
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duty
Sunday School · II a.m.
~
Sunday WorShip - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7: 00 p.m.•
. Wedn esday Services. 7: 00p.m.
Wedne sday Youth Service-7:00p.m.

Full G011pel Lighthouse
33045 Hil and Road, Pomero y
PaS;tor: Roy Hunter
Sunday Schoo! - 10 a:m.
Eveilin g 7:30 p.m. J
Tu esday &amp; Thursday- 7:30p.m.

South Bethel Connrlunlty Church
Silver Ridge
Bib le Sludy 9 a.m. Sunday
Carleton Interden~;~mioatlonal Church .
Kings bury Road
P11stor: Roben Vance
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
Evening Serv ice 6 p.m.

I

:fire &amp;: &amp;afetp
TOLUUII
1..01·111-GeiJ

.. ..._ ,

T1

IIIIIDDI&amp;PO.T

(11t)HI·7e71

Public Meetings
Thursday, Nov. 21
POMEROY - Leading Creek
Advisory Commirtee. regular
session, 9:30 a.m . at the Meigs
$oil and Water Conservation
Districr, 33101 Hiland Road,
Pomeroy.
RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Cohservancy District Board ,
special meeting to discuss personnel, 5:30p.m.

Clubs and
Organizations
Saturday, Nov. 16
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878, 6:30 p.m. at the
hall . Annual Thanksgiving
potluck and fun night to be held.

Sunday, Nov. 17
POMEROY - Revival starts
at the Flatwoods ~ethodisl
Church 7 p.m. nightly continuing
through Nov. 19 at the church.
Speaker will be Rev. Jim Corbitt.
Special singing by Becky
Mahan, Keith Elean, Ray· and
Dolores CundiH.

Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 31

:ilnoulfer'lt

Community
Calendar

Church services

t' reedom GDSpel Mission

SW.ISHER &amp; LOHSE
POMEROY FLOWER
PHARMACY
106 BUITERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMEROY,OH 992-6454
Prescriptions .
"Flowers tor all occasions"
992-2955
Pomeroy

.... 1 ..... . _

Rejoicing Life Church
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Past01: Mike Foreman

~00

"'Fuii -,Gospe l C hurch"
Pas tors John &amp; Pauy Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-50 17
Servke Li me: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
w ednesday 7 p'm

Brogan-Warner ·

-....w1

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .
WoBhip 10:30 un .• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30 p.m.

Bethel Worship Center
Pastor; EnlC.rit us lawrence Foreman
Tuppers Plains Grade -Schoo l
Worship- 10:00 lim
Pastor: Rob Barber
Wednesday
Services - 1 p.m.
Ass isumt Pastor: Karen Davi s
Sunday Worship; 10 am
CliftoD libemacle Church
Eve ning Worship: 6 pm
Cli flon, W.Va.
Youth group tl.r m
Sunday
School - 10 a.m.
Wed nesday: Power in Prayer
Wor!ihip - 7 p.m
and Bible Study - 7 pm
Wellnesday Service· 7 p.m.
Ash Street C hurch
Ash St .. Middl eport- Pastor: Glenn Rowe
New Life Victory Center
Sunday SchoOl - IO:OOa.rr'l.
3773
Georges
Creek Road, Gall ipo lis, OH Su nday Service - 7:00 p.rn.
Pastor:
Bill Slaten
Wed nesda y Service-7 :00p.m
Sunday Services - I0 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
• Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; You th 7 p.m.
Agape Life Center

.......... ··t•

Calvary ~l blt Churtb
Po,meroy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood

Stiversvtlle Community C burch
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Strvices - 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:00 p.m.
Thursday - 7:00 p.m.
·

Community of Christ ·
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Dubl
Suoday School • .9 :30a.m.
• Worship- 10:30 a.m
Wedneliday Services - 7:00p.m.

SY RACU SE Janet
Bolin presented arrangements suitable for classes in
the · annu al Meigs County
Chrisrmas fl ower show when
the Wildwood Garden Club
meet recentl y ar the home of
Tunie Redovian.
"Home for the Holidays" is
thi s year 's theme for the
show that will be held Nov.
23 and 24th at the Meigs
Senior C iti'zen's Ce nter.

DEAR ABBY: I' m in lo ve
with my teacher. I' m 18; he is
23 and single. l have been in
•
•
Jove with him since I met him
18 months ago.
He has n't done anyrh ing
that could cost him his career,
bur there have been times
when he has. shown interest in
me. Recently, though; l was
ADVICE
told by lhe· principal to " be
careful. " Not to. stop, mind
you - just be careful.
· stan d your embarrass ment in
I still love him as much as I the workplace.
ever did, but l can't show it. I
Te ll him the hickeys have
graduate in Dece mber and to go - or he wilL You
was planning on talking to shouldn 't have to spe nd the
hi~ about thi s then. Between rest of your life wearing
now and then, thoug h, what turtleneck sweaters because
should I do? - IN LOVE IN you have a boyfri end who is
LA FAYETTE, GA.
insecure unless he has
DEAR IN LOVE: Until "marked his territory."
then, you and the teacher
DEAR ABBY: Prior to my
should do as• the principal older sister's recent death, she
urged . Be careful. If you shared a family secret. She
don't, you could hann your told me that in tlie 1960s,
reputation and this youn g while he was serving in the
man 's career.
U.S. military in a foreign
The best advice I can offer country, our brothe r had
is to play it cool - very cool fathered a child. He was
- until at least six montns young and fresh out of high
after you graduate. That way, school.
if your interest is reciprocatMy sister said our nowed , he cannot be accused of deceased mother had opened
jumpin g the gun and starting a letter addressed to my
a relation ship while you were brother from the baby's mothstill a student. This may seem .er saying his clii1d was born.
like a long time to wait. but She read it ·-.and tore it up.
it's best for both of you. To my sister's knowledge,
Tongues will wag even then, · Mother never shared the news
so I urge you not to give them with my brother.
Now that I am over the
grist for the rumor mi II .
DEAR ABBY: My live-in shock, I am struggling as to
boyfri end con stantly gives what to do with this infonname hi ckeys. Despite the fact tion if anything . (My
brother
is
happily married
that I have asked him not to,
he inteni'ionally marks my with grown chtldren.)
What would you do? neck and throat on a weekly
CAUGHT IN THE MID·
basis.
I am in my mid-20s and DLE
DEAR CAUGHT: Since
find these bright-red mark4&gt;
both . unprofessional and the woman had your mother's
~nnec essary. l have al so tried address in the States, she
wearing perfume or moistur- clearly was more than a· oneizer on my neck ro get him to night stand . If r were you , I
would tell my brother private·
stop.
How do I prevent the hick- ly. He has a right to know.
Dear Abby is written by
eys, or do I have to get rid of
the boyfriend? - EMBAR· Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
RASSED IN ORLANDO
DEAR EMBARRASSED: and was founded by her
Either your boyfriend has an motlter, Pauline Phillips.
Abby
at
Dear
immature sense of humor, or Write
com
or
P.
0.
www.DearAbby.
he is makin g the ma~ks so
others will know he is inti- Box 69440. Los Angeles, CA
mate with you. ·I can under- 90069.

Abby

Pas1or: Rew. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

( lthtr ( 'hurrlws

Blt?ssed are the pure ICrtlw'!i.fomllyRestaurant
in heart,· fior thev
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
J
Chicken"
shall see God.
w. Main St., Pomeroy
Matthew 5:8
992-5432

............

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 5

Wildwood Garden Club holds meeting

Dear

F1itl1 FeUowship Cruutde for Christ

Portland First C hurch of the Na.urme
Pastor: William Justis
Sunday Scho91-10:00 a.m .
Moming WOrShip - 10:45 a.m.
Surlday Service - 6:30p.m.

14 11 Bridgerilan St., Syracuse
Rev. Mik~: TI1umplion ,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eve ning- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice· 7 p.m.

Hockingporl Church
Gmnd Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m. ·
Worship· 10:3 0 a. m., 7 p.m.
Th ursday Services· 7.p.m.

Church of God Or Prophery
O.J. White Rd. off SL Rt. 160

Sacred Heart Catholic Church

Student plans post-graduate
dating course with teacher

•

Fairview BiWe Cbun:h
letart, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible S1udy · 7:00p.m.

Rutland Church ot the Na:un ne
P&amp;Sior: Rrv. Samuel W. Basye

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · I I a.m.
We dnesday 1 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
, Sunday SChool • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · I 0 'a.m.

I rriltd :\ll'lhodisl

SyracuH Fh'!il Chun:h or God
Apple. and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Ru~scll
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evenin g Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 630 p_m.

the Nazarene

Bailey Run Road
Pnstor: Rev. Emmett Ruwson
Sunday Evt ning 7 p.m.
Thu rsday Servi ce- 7 p.m.

. Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Heletl Kline
Coo lvi lle Church
Main &amp; Fifth Sr.
Sunda y School - 10 a.m.
Worship - ? a. m.
Thesday Services - 7 p~m.

Su nday School ~ 9:45 a.m.
Worship · iJ a.m.

Rutland Churth of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a. m.. 6 p.~.
Wednesday Services " 7 p.m.

Wldte'1 Chapel We.lt-yaa
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woohip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Paslor: Rev. Herbert Gllltt
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m.
WorshLp · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Paslor: Brian Hark ness
Sunda}' Sc hool ~ 10 a.m.
Worship.- 9 a.m.
Wellnc sduy- 7 p.m

www.mydallysentlnel.com

EastMain
Pomeroy, Oh

A_

W

"let u't ce~tu:l your thoughts: with I~'Qc l&amp;l Cll l't•

74()..992·2644 740-992-6298

M~o~l!race

for thee: for m~o~
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp; Supply

137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376 I

I

•

•
••

Se ven new white dogwood
trees have also been purchased and will be planted
soon, according to Bentley.
Evelyn Hollon, president,
we lco med me mbers and
guests Donna Nelson and
Susie Parker Hysell . •Janet
Theiss read devoti ons and
members responded to roll
call by naming the ir favorite
fall· flower.

•

'lnterview.with the Assassin' doesn't hit its target
(AP) - "Interview with
the Assassin" might have
been imagined by the makers
of "The Blair Wnch Project."
As with that horror-free horror film, a disciplined viewer
can see right through ir~ ·con"
trivance - and see there's
nothing there.
.
Structured as a documen. tary and shot on an increasingly jittery handheld digital
camera, it pretends 'to introduce the second gunman in
President Kennedy's assassination, a · bitter e1l:-Marine
who lives across the street
from laid-off TV news cameraman Ron Kobeleski in San
Bernardino, Calif.
Since he has nothing better
to do . .Ron (Dylan Haggerty)
sets up an interview with
Walter Ohlinger (Raymond J.
Barry), who has told him

Love gift
program
· RACINE - A love gift
titled
program
''Thanksgiving and Love
Gifts Go Hand in H,and"
was presented by Martha
L. Beegle at a recenrineeting of the Bertha M. Sayre
Missionary Society held at
the home of Marge Grimm.
The love gift offering
was taken and given to
N~omi Stobart who recently had her home damaged
by ftre. The 'program was
given
by
Nondus
Hendric ks
was
on
Thanksgiving with several
members having readings.
Plans were made for the
December meeting which
will be at the home of
Beegle. Each member is to
present a Christmas reading for the program.
Gifts wiU be exchanged.
Co-hostess will be Stobart.
Stobart had roll call with
each woman answering
with a Bible verse and also
gave the secretary/treasurer's report. The names of
missionaries being remember by the group with birthdays in November were
read and prayer for them
was given.

only that he has committed a
crime and wants to get it off
his chest. When Ron's cam·
era starts rolling, Walter says
·he's dying of cancer and con. fesses to having fired the fatal
-shot from ·behind the picket
fence across the grassy knoll
at Dealey Plaza in Dallas.
·"Interview
with
the
Assassin" is at its most
unnervingly authentic when
Ron and Walter go to Dallas,
and Walter walks through his
actions on Nov. 22. 1963,
standing in the exact spot
from wqich he claims to have
fired the shot that hit
Kennedy in the head.
Afterward • . he says. he
walked away briskly yet
calmly, and by the time people knew where to start lookmg. he was gone. ..
Walter was a nobody, a

hired gun who knew nothing
about why his employers including his fonner commanding officer - wanted
the president dead. He took
the job because "You kill•the
most powerful man in the
world, I'd say that makes you
the most powerful."
From this chilling procla:
mation, writer-director Neil
Burger doesn' t quite know
. where to go next. He reverts
to the conventions · of the
paranoid rhriller - threatenmg phone messages, suspicious men in cars, a shadowy
figure caught on ·a security
camera -to suggest that the ·
conspiracy
to
conceal
Kennedy's real killer remains
very much active.
Movies like "Klute" and
"The Par'\,llax View" wete
able to manipulate your fears

because of their artful cinematic techniques - elegant
aerials and long-lens shots..
But in .this film, the artless
"found footage" conceit
grows tiresome.. in part
because Ron is entirely
unsympathetic - · a bumbling
journalist with an annoying
tendency to photograph him·
self in mirrors, who regards
his wife and daughter with a
shocking indifference.
Barry, a veteran character
actor, disappears behind his
role. To his credit, he plays
Walter completely straight;
you never catch him with a
twinkle in his eye or an
actor's regard for the camera.
Since Walter provides
nothing irrefutable, ti's up to
Ron - and the audience to decide whether to believe
him.

Emmy Awards to continue on broadcast networks
LOS ANGELES (AP)
HBO failed in its bid to win
the Emmy. Awards away
from the major broadcast
networks . but · helped drive
up the price those networks
will pay to keep the ceremony.
The board of governors of
the Acade my of Television
Art s &amp; Sciences agreed
Wedn esday night to an
eight-year, $52 million deal
with ABC . CBS, Fox and
NBC. said academy chairman Bryce Zabel.
That more than doubles
th e $3 million per year the
academy had been receiving
unde r its recently expired
network deal. HBO had
offered a fiv e-year. $50 mil·
lion deal.
"C learl y, we owe an enor·
mous debt of gratitude and
affection to HBO," Zabel

~MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
r

reworked the soil, replanted
the bulbs, the n planted
mums, and purple and ye llow pansies in the bed . T hey
painted be nches inside and
outside the Syrac use Pool.
Bentley also noted that
the cedar tree had been cut
down and that two st umps
still needed to be removed.
After they are removed, an
orname ntal Kwanzan Cherry
tree will be planted, she said .

The Rutland Free Will Baptist
Chu rch 's annual project of
provtding needy families with
holiday food tlaskets got a
boost Wednesday. Eli
Dennison Post 467 .
American Legion, presented
a check to the church for
$500 . Pastor Paul Taylor,
right. accepts the check from
Legionnaire Eugene Fink.
(Ch8!1ene Hoeflich)

••
Meigs County's Oldest Flori st .

Bolin demonstrated traditiona! arrangements · that
would fit into several different categories of the schedule .
Joy Bentley discussed the
Syracuse Park beautification
· project noting that she had
helped and supervised four
southern high School stu dents in a recent project.
The students dug up one of
the beds, removed the bulbs,

Check presented to feed the needy

Syracuse Mission

,Worship - 9:00 fl.m _
Sunday So.:hool - 10:0(1 a.m.

or (;od

Cht~iler Cbun:b of

Friday, November 15, 2002

WOI"5hip- 1 p.m.

Pomervy Cllurth ol tbf- Naurt M
Pastor: Jan Lav~ndtr
StJnday Schoc,&gt;l - 9:30a.m.
Worshrp - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\lic..-es - 7 p.m.

575

East Utart

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: James Satterfield
Sunday School - 9:4~ a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

( 'atholir

740-667-3110

Salem Center
Pastor. William K. Marshall
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
.Worship - 9:15 a.m.
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snow\'l.lle
Sunday Schoo l - 10 a.m.
· Worship - 9 a. m.

The Church of Jesus
Christ of Lalter· D&amp;)' Saints ·
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20- 11 a.m.
Relief Sode tyfPricsthuod II :OS-12: 00
noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Hom emaking meeting. I slllm ~.- 7 p.m.

ML Moriah Cbur&lt;h of God

Seeond Baplist Church
Ravenswood, WV
Pus1or: D'avid W. McClain
Su nduy S~;hou l 10 amMorni ng worship II am Evening - 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Coolville, Ohio

Rutland
Sunday Schoo l · 9:~U a. m
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Sel'\lices- 7 p.m.

Lattl'r·Dm Sainh

Chriltlu Union

r

( 'htrrrh

Rutland Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
_Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday So.:hool . 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedncsday_Services- 7 p.m.

White Funeral Home
.Since 1858
9 Fifth Street

Sunday School -9: 15a. m.
Worshi p· 10 a.m.
Yoo th Fellow:sliip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Sunday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - 10_:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.

7:30 p. m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service -7: 30p.m.

_.

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Sund ay Ev~ n i n g · 6:00p.m.
P11stor: Mark McComas

992-6677

Rock Springs
Pastor: Keith Rader

Laurtl Cliff Fret Methodist Chun:h
Rev. Les Stnmdt and Myra L. Strand!

Hartford Church of Christ In

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St.. Middle{Klrt
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig. Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30-a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Bill Quickel

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Browe r
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

St. John Lutherari Chun:h

Hillsid e &amp;ptJst Church
$ 1. Rt . J43 just otlRt. 7
Pastctr: Rev. James R. ~cree , Sr.
Sumluy Unified Scivicc.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc.
INSU RANCE
Full line of
Insurance
Products+
"'
Financial
Services
..
AGENCIES Inc.

Pearl Chapel
School - 9 a. m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

~ u nday

R~:v. Mark Michael
Sunday X hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship.- 10:45 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Thursday Bihlc Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Bradford Church of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mini ster: Doug Shrunbliri
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday S(,: hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship -8: 00a.m., 10:30 a. m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Old Brthd Free Will Baptist Chun:h
2860\ St. Rt. 7, Mitldleport
Sunday School . Ia' a.m.
E\·ening- 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services -- 7:00

Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9 a. m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church

Rutl11ad Chun::h of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.
Worshi p· 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.

Hickory Hill5 Chun-.h of Chri~t
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.ni.
Wonohip - 10 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices ·- 7 p.m.

Minersville

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
7'5 Pea rl St. , Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wors hip-9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -. 7:30p.m.

Su nday School - IOa.m.
Worsh ip · II a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wed ne~ay Services- 7:00 p.m.

Bethlehem Baptist Chun:h
Grem Rend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m
Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.
· Wcdnc.sday Bible Study- 6:00p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I I :00 a.m.

l-Ine Grov~ Hibl~ ll~liness Church
112 mi le 'o ff Rl. 325
Pnsto r: Rev. 0 .' De ll Man ley
Sunday Schoo l -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.• 7:30 p.m.
Wcdne~day Servk e ~ 7:30 p.in.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon
39558 Bradh~;~ ry Road, Midd leport
SUnday School - 9:30 il. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

.

Heath (Middleport)
Pas lor: Rob Brower

RMe of Sharon Holines..&lt;l Church
Leading Cree k Rd .. Ru tland
Pastor: Re \'. DeweY King
Su nday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wedn~sday pro1ye r mee ting- 1 p.m.

l'uppers Plain Church ol Cbrisl
· Instrumental
Worship Service- 9 a.m..
Communion - 10 a.m.
Su nday School - I 0: I!5 a. m
YolJth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Racine Fin;t Baptist
l,as1or: Rick Rul e
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wnr~ h 1p - 10 :40 a.m., 7:00 p.in.
Wcdncsdlly Sc'n -ices- 7: 00p.m.

Forest Run
Paslor: Hoh Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a. m
Worship , 9 a.m. ·

Harrisorlvillc Road
Pas1or: Charles McKenzie
Sunday Schoo l 9:30 a.m.
. Worship - 11 a. m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Serv i~;c - 7:00 p.m.

lion Church ol Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonvill e Rd . (Rt.l43}
Pas10r: Roger Watson
· StJnday School - 9:.m a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.,-7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

E. Lamar O' Bryant

Community Church
· Pastor: Ste,·e TOmek
Main Street, Ru tland
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-? p.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel

Btarwallow Ridge Church ol Chrisl
Pascor: Bruce Terry
Sunday Schoo l -9:30a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m.

llolinl''-'

F1at"'·60d!i
Pastor:· Keith Rader
Sunday SchoOl - Ji:J a.m.
• Worshi p · II a.m.

Danrillt Holi~ Churrll
31057 State Route-325. ~gs,• ll e
Paslor: Gary Jackson
Su nday S(;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m .
W~d nesday prayer service - 1 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

C hurrh

Pastor: Keilh Rader
Sunday Sd10ol - I0 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.llJ..

Sunday School and
tl nl)' Eucharist I I :00 a.m.

Pvmavy Westshlt Church ot Christ
33226 ·0li l ~ n 's Home Rd.
Sunday School - I I a .m.
Wordllp - 10a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wcdntsday Services - 7 p.m.

P.O. Box 467. Dudding 1...ant

Enterpri.w

326 E. Mai n St, Pomeroy
James Bernacki. Rc..-. Kathllrin Foster

,.

• U ber1y Assembly of God

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
WoOOip - II a.m.
Wtdne~y Servitts · 7:30p.m.

l·. pbmpal

........., a..m..r Christ
Entm1RMI Apostolic Tabrmadt h w:.
Loop Rd off Ne._ Lima Rd . Rudand

P;1~ 1m~

Tuppers PlaiDS SL Paul
Pastor: Jane Beanie
Sunday Sdtoo) - 9 a.m.
WorshiJI - 10 a.m.
Tll('sday Sen·ices • 7:30 p_m_

Trinity Church

Rh"e" r VIllley

Bapti~t

Wormip - 9:30 ~o. m .
Sunday School · 10:30 a_m.
r1nt Sund.a)· of Month - 7:00p.m. 5ervice

Sun. Mus - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Man - 8 ~ 30 a.m.

Evening - 7:30p.m.

Rulland Flrsl

Friday. November 15, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Subscribe today.
992-2156

..

said. The cable channel's
offer heightened awareness
of the "treasured resource"
the Emmy Awards represent, he said.
The ·new network deal
also gives the academy
more creative approval over
the ceremony, which will
rotate among the four networks from year to year.·
The decision to stay with
the broadcast networks was
reached during a meeting at
Emmy headquarters that
lasted less than two hours.
officials
Academy
weighed
considerations
other than money. The net·
works were threatening ro
put a strong lineup opposite
an HBO awards show and
even withhold actors from
the ceremony.
When the ·E mmys are a
shared industry event "we

all lay doWn our swords to
celebrate television for one
night each year," CBS
spokesman Chris Ender said
Monday . ."But setting it up
at one or several competing
networks creates a competitive situation."
"If thai' s the case. CBS
will counterprogram rh e
broadcast
aggress ively,"
Ender said.
Although HBO is a pre mium cable channel. it was
expected to unsc rambl e its.
signaL for the Emmys to
reach all cable and sate llite
viewers. The big four netWorks poinred out, however,
that 14 perce nt of U. S.
homes receive onl y overthe-air TV and could not see
an un sc rambled HBO show.
In recent years: HBO pro·
grams
including
"The
Sopranos" and "Sex and the

City" have proven to be
Emmy powerhouses, spoiling network bids for several
top prizes.
The 54-year-old Emmy
Awards, while not as popular as the Oscars, are
believed to generate a profit
of between $10 million and
$20 million for the network
airing the cere mony that
year.
Broadcasters noted they
have to fool the bill for production costs of about $5
million as well as marketing
expenses for the show.
Gaining. a bigger share of
th e profits will enable the
ac ademy "to do more good
work" with its educational
.
"" and other indusprograms
try- re lated eve nts , Zabel
said.

Give Blood...Save Alite!
•
•
•
•
•
•

Thursday, December 5, 2002
FREE GIFT TO
Noon to 6 p.m.
AllDONORSI
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
Sponsored by the Plea5ant Valley Hospital Au.Jiliary
For more information call: (304) 675-7222

PLEASANT
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�0 inion

:The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Friday, November 15, 2002

~ttii;

.The Daily Sentinel

•

•

•'

•

Den Dickerson
Publisher

•

•I

i.,

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

.

,•
•

Leuers ro the edito r are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letrers are .i ubject tu editing and must be
signed and include. add res.\· and . telephone number. No
··. umigned /euers 1rill be published. Leiters should be in good
, . wsze. addr£'.\'Sing issues, not persmzq.lities.
The opi11ions expressed in the column below are the consemus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s editorial board,
unless othowise noted.

•

'

.
•'

deal with this kind of information."
Erin Fairchild. a spokeswoman for
. Methodist Hospital in Houston, said the
hospital's security staff was talking with
members of different departments,
"We have alerted different people
around the hospital in an attempt to
heighten awareness," said Stefanie Asin, a
Methodist Hospital spokeswoman. ''We
are not doing anything extraordinary."
Chicago Police Department Officer
Carlos Herrera said police were being told
to be on the lookout for .anything suspicious, and were alerting hospitals of the
potential danger. ,
"We've always been on a state.of high
alert," Herrera said. ''That hasn't
changed."

'Miss Cleo' settlement calls for forgiving ·
$500 million in customer debts ·

•

'

•

•

•

•

A Czech soldier in a protective suit decontaminates a colleague during a chemical warfare training exercise Urn AI Aish,
50 kilometers (30 miles) from the Iraqi border in the northern
Kuwait desert. The training was timely as U.N. weapons
inspectors prepare to test whether Iraq is willing to comply
with a U.N. Security Council resolution to disarm or risk a U.S.
military attack. That, in turn, could trigger a deadly Iraqi
response here and elsewhere in the Gulf.(AP)

~'

Looking beyond saving Amtrak
should get consideration

\

• Chicago Tribune. on the possibilities beyond Amtrak: Let
Amtrak ride into the sunset.
Amtrak is back on Capitol Hill, clamoring for $1.2 billion
more in subsidies. Predictably, foes will demand Amtrak
make a protit, a remote expectation, while supporters will
argue for subsidies ad infinitum.
This cycle gets taxpayers neither savings nor decent train
service. Let 's think new ideas: Dismantle Amtrak and reconstitute it into a regional system of high-speed links serving
large urban centers. These networks should be driven by market demand, wi\h state and local governments handling a significant portion of the planning and funding.
A bill introduced by Rep. Don Young (R-Aiaska) roughly
followed those outlines but it died in the House last summer.
Congress ought to consider it. Continuin&amp; subsidies only postpones Amtrak's inevitable day of reckomng. ·
A new train network requires new assumptions. It's unlikely it will ever make a profit - no train service in the world
does - which makes privatization a remote possibility....
Studying and building such lines will require heavy subsidies by the feds - and state and local governments. States
ought to assume a good portion of the cost and the risk, to
avoid the usual grabbing at federal bucks - for anything simply because they are there. ,,
·
What Young's bill and the plan by the Midwest Regional
Rail Initiative fail to .do is get rid of Amtrak. The proposals
assume Amtrak, with its history of mismanagement and rigid
union rules, will run the new rail network.
That's not going to work. Amtrak is a failed concept. It
needs to be shut down and replaced with a new network more
responsive to !(!day's needs. Anything less will mean more of
·
the same - sinking good public money after 'bad.

. SAINTS AND SINNERS

F!fih Commandment ojfers questions in interp·retation

WASHINGTON (AP) The operaiors of Miss Cleo's
psychic hot line agreed
. Thursday to cancel $500 million in customer bills to settle
federal charges that the service fleeced callers while
pi:Ornising mystical insights
mto love and money.
The settlement requires
Access Resource Services
Inc. and Psychic Readers
Network Inc. to stop using
pay-per-call n.umbers to sel,l
their soothsayingservices, the

Federal Trade Commission
Under the settlement, the
said.
The
two . Fort companies did not admit to
Lauderdale, Ra.-based com- breaking any law but agreed
panies, which promoted a to stop trying to collect
national network of "psychic · money from customers who
readers" on television and the called the service and to forInternet, also must pay the give about $500 million in
FfC a $5 million fine.
outstanding charges. The ser"I'm no psychic bill I can vice also must return all
foresee this : If you make uncashed checks to cusdeceptive claims, there is an tamers.
·
FfC action in your future,"
The FfC voted 5-0 to
said Howard Beales, director approve the settlemeiu. The
of the FfC's consumer pro- amount involved eclipses the
tection bureau.
record $215 million that

Soldiers killed in
Army excercises Government

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Nov. 15, the 319th day of 2002. There
!are 46 days left in the year.
··
; : Today 's Highlight in History:
·
: :On Nov. 15, 1777, the Continental Congress approved
~the Articles of Confederation, a precursor to the
l Constitution of the United States.
~; On this date:
f ln 1806, explorer Zebulon Pike sighted the mountaintop ·
.
.
; now known as "Pikes Peak."
;:: In 1889, Brazil's monarchy was overthrown.
"-' In 1926, the National Broadcasting Co. debuted wiih a
Bv DtANA WEST
~actio networlc of 24 stations.
The
President
has made .it known:
;:: : In 1939, President Roosevelt laid the cornerstone of the
There
will
be
no
gloating
in this White
~ Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C.
House
about
the
amazing
Republican
.&gt;.: In 1940, the first 75,000 men were called to arll)ed forces
victories on Election Day. There will be
{,duty under peacetime conscription.
.
.
·
:•: In 1966, the flight of .Gemini 12 ended successfully as • no shiny-eyed exulting in the GOP's
historic gains in the House and Senate,
,:4stronauts James A. Lovell and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin Jr.
and
no breathless enthusing about the
.;~plashed down safely in the Atlantic.
·
president's political courage in having
:~: In 1969, 250,000 protesters staged a peaceful demonstrastaked all his political capital on this
:.;tion in Washington against the Vietnam War.
election- and won.
mid-term
. ~: In 1982, funeral services were held in Moscow's Red
That's
fine
and good for a White
i:Square for the late Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev.
House in which the president has an
:~.· tn· 1985, Britain and Ireland signed an accord giving
innate
sense of decorum down to his
~ofJublin an official consultative role in governing Northern
boot
tips.
Little wonder he demands
:-~eland .
from
his
staff, as spokesman Ari
: ~ ' In 1998, Kwame Ture, the civil rights activist formerly
Fleischer put1t, "a touch of gracious.;!Cnown as Stokely Carmichael, died in Guinea at age 57.
ness." But what about the rest of us?
~~ ' Ten years ago : President -elect Clinton and his wife,
·
Saying
the right thing (sans smirk) to
~· tfillary, hosted a dinner in Little . Rock, Ark. , for
the wronged Democrat may not come
•: Democratic congressional leaders in the first such meeting
easily to someone still giggling over all
:;since the presidential election.
· ·
those unexpected victories. ·
:'· . Five years ago: A day after moving to halt the import of
Tut, tut. It's important to bear in mind
;•modified assault weapons , President Clinton defended the
that where there are big winners
r:action in his weekly radio address, saying such weapons
(Erlich, Coleman, Bush), there are tii g
!. did nothing but " inspire fear and wreak deadly havoc on
losers (Kennedy Townsend, Mondale.
~ : our streets."
·
McBride). We need to walk !50 feet
: · · One year ago : President Bush .and Russian President
without electioneering in their shoes.
. :vladimir Putin failed to resolve their disp ute over U.S.
Empathize with that new minoritr.
~ : mi ss il e · shield plans but pledged to fight terrorism. and
Realize they don't color Democratic
:;deepen U.S.-Russian ti es a s their summit , which began at
states blue for nothing. You never know
!·the White House then shifted to Bush 's Texas ranch, came
when you might happen upon, say,
! to a close.
·
Richard Gephardt. With just a little nol · Today 's Birthdays: Judge Jose ph Wapner is 83. The U.S.
gloat sensitizing, you would know how
!:Ambassador to Japan , Howard H. Baker Jr. , is 77. Actor Ed
to put the House minority leader at ease
: Asner is 73. Singer Petula Clark is 70. Comedian Jack
by congratulating him for being the
i ·Burns is 69. Actress Joanna Barnes is 68. Actor Sam
only member of the Democratic leade~i ,Waterston is 62.'Pop singer Frida (ABBA) is 57 . Actor Bqb
ship to have retained his job.
i ,Gunton is 57. Director-actor James Widdoes is 49. Rock
Then there's Tom Daschle. The plight
t_singer- producer Mitch Eas ter is 48. Actress Bever.ly
of the erstwhile Senate majority leader
1 D ' An ge lo is 48 . "'Toni ght Show" band leader · Kevin
puts a greater strain on the old tact
: Eubanks is 45 . Rapper E-40 is 35. Rapper ODB (Wu Tang
resources. It's not easy finding the right
~ · Clan) is 34. Actress Rachel True is 33. Country singer Jack
thing to say to someone assuming the
t Ingram is 32. Actress Virginie Ledoyen is 26. · ·
minority position while passing the
~· : Thought for Today : "Psychology, which explains everybaton, or gavel, or whatever it is, that
::fhing,/ Explains nothin g,/ And we. are still in doubt." - poof ·- · turns eve ry one of his
~ · Marianne Moore , Ameriean poet ( 1887-1972).
DemOcratic committee chairmen,

\VEST'S VIEW

Forget gloating, Bush VVhite House has work .to do

~·~

... - ·· ··· ·" ··--· ·

.. .

- ..

including Patri.c k Leahy, into a ranking to forget ' the more poll-challenged
minority member. (This, in the fairy- among the Clinton-supported canditale world Of Washington, is the politi- dates · and see what workeil. Most
cal equivalent of a frog.)
·
Americans know what happened when
Words fai!?'You bet. In this case, the the Democratic Party got together in
no-gloat Republica'le§.e!Jks inspiration Minnesota no{ to bury Paul Wellstone
from someone ~ speaks Mr. but to resurrect Walter Mondale. Not
Daschle' s lingo, someone like Terry many realize that Mr. Clinton flew
McAuliffe, the Democratic National straight from the land of 10,000 frozen .
Committee chairman. The rest is easy. lakes to another memorial tribute-- this
Simply reassure Mr. Dasc hle that, as one a four-rally event in Hawaii 'for the
Mr. McAuliffe now says, we are in late Patsy Mink, the Democratic con"basically the same place we were after g~essw?man who died in September.
the 2000 election. · Fifty-fifty. Parity. B11l Chnton may have been .the kiss of
Not much has changed." Add that per- death for livin&amp; Democrats - Mr.
sonal touch by asking what's one or Clinton campaigned for Hawaii 's
two senators among friends? Then as'k Democratic gubernatorial candidate,
the new Senate minority leader to pass for example, and the state elected its
along the news to Jim Jeffords. .
first Republican governor in 40 years
Mr. McAuliffe himself presents a - but · something clicked for Patsy
simpler case. Avoid the . minority- Mink . She posthumously held her seat.
majority unpleasantnesses altogether (Maybe Mr. Clinton put her over the
by telling him that it's the dream of top when he said he "was a declared
every Republican that he remain DNC dead~ dozen times when I ran for pres- .
chairman. So long as Mr. McAuliffe 1dent m 1992, and a dozen times after
stays at . the helm, of course, the ... ")Could it .be there's a future for the
Democratic Party remain s ih thrall to former president in memorial politics?
Mr. McAuliffe 's . sponsors, Bill and Call it "mourning in America.'
Hillary Clinton. Judging by thi s same
Why not? The man has to do somemid-term election: that's good news for thing . Even before Tuesday 's vote,
the GOP.
there were politicos krtocking the
Why? This election was not - how Clinton factor. "I'm qpt sure you'll be
to put it ·without gloating? - a red-let- . able to blame Clinton and Gore for
· ter day for ·clinton, Inc. Whiie the Democratic defeats next week, but
Democrats netted four new governor- you'll certainly be able to say their ct4'
ships, the Florida, Massachusetts, New . has come and gone," Republican strataYork and even Maryland statehou ses g1st R1ch Galen .told the Washingtoh
went Republican .despite the Clintons' T1mes. The mornmg after the electioh
frenetic flesh -pressing i!nd fund-raising Newsweek 's Howard Fineman was
efforts. While Democrats won in New more succinct : "The Clinton era t-; · •· ,
Jersey and Arkar.&gt;.tS, Senate seats in .tinally, tinally over."
• • ;':
New Ham pshire, North Carolina,
No time to gloat. The Bush era, with
Georgia, Oregon , Misso uri and its midterm mandate, is well underway. · ·
Minnesota went for the GOP despite -1
or because of-- that. same Clinton con(Diana West is a columnist for
nection.
Washington Times. She can be contadIn the no-giQat spirit, maybe it 's best ed via di(lnaw@wattglobal.ner.)

· FORT POLK, La. (AP) the world in 36 hours. About
Two soldiers were killed 4,000 soldiers from the diviThursday during Army train- sion's 3rd Brigade, !87th
ing exercises at a mock village · Regiment,
served
in
used in combat exercises. In Afghanistan until · August. ·
Utah, an Air Force Reserve F- Elliott did not know if the two
' WASHINGTON (AP) · '16 crashed, killing the piiot.
soldiers had been overseas.
The government is investiIn Utah, the single-seat F' The 'crash was the second
gating whether a biotechfatal accident involving F-1~ 16C went down in the desert
nology company broke fedin Utah in less than three Wednesday afternoon, killing
era! rules by mixing genetiweeks.
Lt. Col. Dillion L. McFarland,
cally modified crops with
: ·T he ' soldiers killed in 40, a member of the 419th
soybeans in Iowa and
Louisiana were with a bri~ade Fighter Wmg, an Air. Force
Nebraska.
of the !OlstAirbome Div1sion Reserve unit.
The
· Agriculture
from Fort Campbell, Ky.,
Authorities located the
Department announced late
training at the Army's Joint wreckage and McFarland's
Wednesday that ProdiGene
Readiness Training Center at body about 2 1/2 hours later,
Inc., of College Station,
Fort Polk. No details on the said Stephanie Jolms, a fighter
Texas, violated · federal
nature of their deaths were wing spokeswoman. There
rules in September when it
released.
was no immediate word on
completely
failed
to
· John Minton, a civilian pub- what' caused the crash.
remove
corn
kernels
lie affairs officer at Fort
McFarland, a commercial
remaining from a biotech
Campbell, confirmed the pilot, husband llltd father of
com crop planted in Iowa
deaths.
two who lived near Hill Air
·last year. Federal officials
· Both soldiers were flown to Force Base, joined the 419th in
had ordered the company to
Fort Polk hospital after the 1998 and had more than 3,000
bum the l55 acres of corn.
.5:30 a.m. accident, Foil Polk flying hours in an F-16, includProdiGene is a company
spokesman . Ron Elliott said. in~ 85 combat hours, Johns
that produces plant-made
Their identities were withheld said.
.
.pharmaceuticals and indus·until relatives could be noli- · "Our deepest sympathies go
trial products. The governtied.
out to the family and friends of . ment has strict guidelines
The JOist Airborne is a rapid the warrior we lost," fighter
for planting and removing
deployment, air assault divi- wing commander Col. Wayne
such crops to make sure
those
products do not mix
sion trained to go anywhere in Conroy said.
with the food supply or
mingle with neighboring
crops.
On Tuesday, the Food and
Drug Administration said it
was ordering ProdiGene to
destroy 500,000 bushels of
soybeans
grown
in
Nebraska rather than sell
them for food because the
soybeans were contaminated with biotech corn. The
CHARLESTON,
S.C. is found along the · U.S.
bushels have been qua'ran(AP) - Along a rock-lined coast from Massachusetts to
cove on Charleston Harbor .Texas, ·but the turtles were
JCP
.. a, few yards from where a almost wiped out in the
·· ·:confederate battery lobbed early years of the last centuMEIICIWIT noR£"''"'
-.the first shot of the Civil ry because of demand for
3:18 2od •""""'
.war, David Owens is fight- turtle soup.
"One hundred years ago,
Golllpolis. oH 4563 1
ing his own battle to ensure
25
(74
the future of the diamond- this was a super deluxe
item," 0 wens said as he . t,;:~i!.J.;:=~-==:::.:::._J
back terrapin.
. His weapons are comput- held one of the turtles fitted
.ers, boats and tiny transmit- with a transmitter before it O'Dell
Lumber "''IP 1• ..,,,t Around n... con'""
.ters that send signals from was returned to the harbor
"'l , , t
~~
I
·the shells of the small tur- in the area known as Grice
'
.
tles to .underwater receivers. Cove. "They shipped them
"They are a species of to Philadelphia, New York
concern because we know and the Boston area. They
the population used to be a got $8 apiece for this animal
lot larger,'~ said Owens, 100 years ago."
Laws restricting turtle
-director of · the graduate
and a drop in
harvesting
biology rrograrn at the
demand
for
turtle soup 20,16,12 ga. 2'/," ..........$2.,9
College o Charleston.
.410 ga ........................ $2.49
The diamondback terrapin helped the animals recover.
12 ga. 3" Magnum:...... $2.99
20 ga. 2'1.'' Sabots ....... $7.99
T~ The Voters of Meigs County:
12 ga. Partition Gold ... $S.99
12 ga. Platinum Tlp ... $10.99
Thank you for your complimentary ·

•.!\\

¥

~

tined at an elevator in
Aurora, Neb.
Cindy Smith, deputy,
administrator for USDA's
Animal and Pi&lt;lnt Health
Inspection Service, ·said
inspectors told the company before it harvested the
· Nebraska crop that it needed to remove .the left-over,
or "volunteer," corn.
· "They did not follow
those procedures well .
enough for us to be confident that there were no
standing, volunteer corn,"
she said.

While baby boomers are
less likely to venture onto
the Internet than people ag~f"1
18 to 29, the ones who do · ·
go online are more inclined
than younger surfers to
focus on subjects like health
care and finance.

Percentage o!lnternet users

performing apeclllc activity
Usa a-mall on any given day
Gel health information
Get financial information
Trade stocks/bonds
Use government Web sHes
Sports searches
Job searches
Housing searches
Genealogy searches

SOURCE: Pew ln11rnet and American Life

49%
54
28
9
49
51
84
48
24

.

54%

50
15
112
41
34
28
19

P~ct

·.Researcher works to
'ensure future of
:diamondback terrapins

ca:\:;y
!,;"!';'!!

:Jhu.e7/ai'at.
~

vote on Nov. s, 2002
Your support.is appreciated.
Nancy Parker Campbell, ·
Meigs County Auditor

r/k

'

Citigroup Inc. agreed io repay
customers in September to
settle deceptive lending
charges involving mortgages
and credit insurance. ·
The FfC filed a lawsuit in
February accusing the companies of misdeeds includmg
false promises of free psychic
readings, tricky billing tactics
to squeeze money out of
callers and unrelenting and
abusive telemarketing calls.
The ac1ion was prompted by
more than 2,000 complaints.

Who gets what "''
from the Web
.,., ..

_
probes··ProdiGene
for crop-mixing

[~TODAY IN HISTORY
I:

ment by the FBI regarding a possible
threat to hospitals ... has very low credibility. It is uncorroborated and that is why
it was not made public."
The Chicago FBI. said such an attack
''would take place in reaction to the continued arrest of a Pakistani national by
Pakistani authorities," and could come
leading up to the holiday season.
''We ·have to .let the public and the hospitals know about it," Doguim said.
''We're going to err on the side of caulion."
Doguim warned. hospital · staff and
patients not to overreact.
''This stuff is going to continue to go
on," he said. "Be confident in the fact we
have procedures and systems in place to

''

End of line

t:

Friday, November IS, 2002

Houston FBI says uncorroborated information
warns hospitals may be terror targets
HOUSTON (AP) ·- Hospitals in
Houston, San. Francisco, Chicago and
Washington have been alerted they may
be targets ofa terrorist threat, the Houston
FBI says. But the White House said that
the credibility of the threats was "very
low."
FBI agent Bob Doguim said .
Wednesday that the agency received the
uncorroborated information from overseas intelligence sources. ·He said the
threat to hospitals in the four cities was
not specific, though it mentioned a time
between. December and April - and the
possibility of anthrax or explosives.
White House deputy press secretary
Scott McClellan said Thursday: 'The
information given to local law enforce-

••

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

NATIONAL VIEW

Preparing for attack

•'
'

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�Inside:
Scoreboard, Page 82
Roush loves racing, Page B4
MHS sports banquet, Page 85

Vaughan·s Supermarket
. Is Celebrating

PageBl
Friday, November 15, 2002

.

rf3~f(J~e'f .J!lp-,-reeiafi(Jn

Fernandez out
of CART finale ·

ayf

Hampton
rethinking deal·

2 Liter

GROUND
CHUCK

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) Mike Hampton will rethink
blocking a proposed six-player deal that would send him .
from Colorado to the Florida
Marlins.
The tentative trade would
move Hampton am! outfielder Juan Pierre to the Marlins ·
for catcher Charles Johnson,
outfielder Preston Wilson ,
left-hander Vic Darensbourg ·
and infielder Pablo Ozuna.
Hampton and Johnson have
until midday Saturday to
' decide whether to waive their
no-trade clauses.

PEPSI
'

¢
Lb.
10 Lb. Bag

Royals to
trim payroll

Eckrich ,.
Deli.Sliced

RUSSETT
POTATOES

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
-The Royals had their highest payroll in 2002 and their
worst' win-loss record, so
Kansas City owner David
Glass intends to trim the pay- .
roll by about $1 0 million to
~37 million for 2003.

BOLOGNA
¢

¢

·Greer to miss
2003.season

Lb.

Ea.

C,elebrating
-"'~~~~er Jl.pp-ree!a(!M
.

.
ayf

SATURDAY, 'NOVEMBER f6TH ONlY!

FOOTLONG
HOTDOGS
w/Sauce
¢

VEGETABLE
SOUP ·
~

~

MEDIUM
ICE CREAM·
CONE

w/ Crackers
.

CHICAGO (AP)- A 15year-old boy who attacke4 a
Kansas City Royals coach
during a baseball game at
Comiskey Park was sentenced to five years of probation , ordered to . undergo
mandatory counseling and
perform 30 hours of community service.

CHAMPAIGN, lll. (AP)
- lliinois coach Ron Thmer
knows
enough · about
Maurice · Clarett to know
he'd rather see the Ohio
State running back on the
sidelines and out of uniform
this weekend.
Turner isn't likely to get
his wish,
Clarett, used sparingly the
last three weeks because of
nerve damage in his left
shoulder, is.expected to start
Saturday for second-ranked
Ohio State (11-0, 6-0 Big
Ten).
,
Even with the injury,
Cl~tt is a major concern
for Illinois (4-6, 3-3), whose
defense has struggleci
against the .run and is ~i ving
up 197 yards rushmg a
game.
So how much time ·has
Tuiner spent preparing for
Clarett?
"Too much. Too much to
allow me to ~et some sleep,"
he s~d. "He s a ~at player.
He's n.ot played like a fresh-

Rookie Peppers
suspended

Hewitt No. 1 at
Masters Cup
SHANGHAI, China (AP)
- Andre Agassi 's second
loss in the season-ending
Masters Cup means Lleyton
Hewitt will finish the year
with the world No. I ranking.
. Agassi · double-faulted on
match point, handing Juan
Carlos Ferrero a 7-5, 2-6,7-6 (6)
victory. Shortly after the match,
Agassi withdrew from the tournament with a hip injury.
Hewitt gave Marat Safin
hi s third straight loss.
Agassi 's second strai~ht
defeat al so clinched a semtfinal berth for Roger Federer,
1\lho ran hi s record to 2-0 by
stopping Jiri Novak.

Homemade

.BEAN
SOUP

man. He's big; physical, Claret!.
instinctive ·- really a terrif-· The 6-foot, 230-pound
ic football player.
running back had an opera"All the hype he's getting tion after the foUrth game of
is well deserved."
. · the season 10 repair tom carClarett, who rushed for tilage in his ri~ht knee.
175 yards and three touch- Instead of taking tt easy, he
.downs in Ohio State's open- scored three touchdowns
er, generated . He is man and rushed for I04 yards the
Trophy talk early in the sea- next game despite having
son.
Jlis knee stitched up at halfThat ended with the time after .the incision
injury, which has limited opened up and began breed,
Claret! to 18 carries for 91 ing.
yards rushing over the last
"It's real difficult because
three games.
when I get into the game I ·
Clarett concedes he hasn't try to run over people or get
been tlie same since. The some contact in·," Clarett
freshman who was plowing . said.
·
over defenders early in the
With Clarett limited, Ohio
season says he's had to State has looked vulnerable.
abandon that bruising style
The Buckeyes sneaked by
of ruit~g. at least for,now. Penn State 13-7 when
"I'm going to have to if Tlarett was forced to leave
I'm going to last," Clarett the game with the shoulder
said. ''The remainder of the injury.
.
season, I'm going to have to
Last week against Purdue,
choose different ways to the Buckeyes trailed by
~all, no~ pl~y ~ ag*ressive three points late in the fourth
m certam sttuattons.
That hasn't be easy for
PIIIH IH Cllrett, 14

National title hopes ·
on line·against Illinois
.

'

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP)
- Cie Grant doesn't have
to be remindtid how close
Ohio State is.to playing for a
national championship.
With victories over
Illinois on Saturday and
Michigan next week, the
No. 2 Buckeyes will earn a
nip to·the Fiesta Bowl and a
chance at the national title.
Though few will admit it,
it's on the minds of all the
players and it's why Grant
chose the Buckeyes.
"You're at a position right
now that you dream of. This
is the reason why you come
to an Ohio State or any big, time major college, to have
the opportunity to do this,"

·Jersey
controversy
: HELENA,. Mont. (AP) Several Sacramento State
player greased their jerseys
with Qonstick cooking spray
on the sideline during thetr
Joss at Montana lasi weekend.
Before determining a punishment, the Big Sky Conference
and Sacramento State are tryi!Jg to figure out how many
players used the spray and
whether coaches knew.

w/ Cornbread

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) There's been much more talk
about budget cutting than barrier-breaking contracis this
offseason.
That 's just what commissioner Bud Selig wanted
when he agreed to a new
labor deal in August.
"I really believe that we are
beginning to see results of it,"
Selig said Thursday after
addressing the general managers at their annual· meeting.
"I just want to wait for Some
time to elapse so I can give a
better answer."
The new labor deal increases the amount of shared local
revenue and reinstitutes a luxury tax.
. Next year 's luxury -tax
threshold will be $117 million
- using 40-man rosters plus
benefits - and most teams
are intent on making sure they
remain under that number.
Even the free-spending
New York Yankees are cutting their budget because of
the deal that club officials
. estimate will result in at least
$20 million more in luxurytax and revenue-sharing payments next season.
Los
Texas,
Atlanta,
Angeles, Boston and the New
York Mets also have talked
about reducing payroll.
only
the
Meanwhile,
Philadelphia Phillies have
been aggressive in the freeagent market.
"I' II be more excited about
what I see than what I read,"
Selig said. "Until they've
·done it and I see it, .I don't
know that."
While Selig has spent several years saying that only the
high-spending teams can win
championships , this year
showed differently:· Anaheim
(15th in payroll) beat San

Francisco( lOth) in the World
Series.
In fact, none of the four
teams that made it to the
league championship series
were among the top eight
payrolls and five of the top
eight spenders dido 't even
make.the·postseason.
"] understand this year that
if you look at the makeup of
the playoffs it was a little better," Selig said. "I'm grateful
for that. I think Anaheim is
the first product of revenue
sharing. Revenue sharing has
helped Anaheim develop and
keep its players."
Selig also addressed .the
uncertain situation abo.ut the
Expos, who survived a contraction attempt but probably
won't stay in Montreal after
this season.
The commissioner said the
owners were close to approving a plan that would allow
the Expos to play two 10game· homestands . next year
in Puerto Rico. That probably
will be voted on at an owners'
meeting next week in Irving,
Texas.
·
''I'm optimislic the deal
will work," he said. ''I'm
hopeful. I'm reluctant to say
anything until the deal is
done."

Selig also said he would
like to establish a 2003 budget for the Expos within. the
next weekor so. The commissioner's office determines the
team's budget after the other
29 clubs bought the Expos
from Jeffrey Loria in
February.
Montreal's offseason plans
are on hold until genef'dl manager Omar Minaya knows
what his payroll will- be.
Without an increase in pay-

a worry for Illinois

NEW YORK (AP)
Carolina Panthers rookie
defensive end Julius Peppers
was suspended for four
games by the NFL for testing
positive for a banned substance in a dietary supplement. Peppers would appeal
the suspension, meaning ·he
can play in Sunday's game
against Tampa Bay.

¢

Homemade

...GiroP\t.Clarett rStil

.

Attacker on
probation

DAIRY UEEN
is

Ohln State running back Maurice Clarett, _left, out runs Purdue's Stuart Schweigert (9) and
Niko Koutouilides to the sidelines for a first.down in the second quarter Saturday in West
Lafayette, Ind. (AP)

. ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)
- Texas outfielder Rusty
· Greer knows he will niiss the
2003 season after four offseason operations, but he doesn't
believe it means the end of
· lris~eer,.•.
.~

.

.Selig likes results
of new labor deal ·

College Football

MEXICO CITY (AP)
Adrian Fernandez has been
forced to drop out . of the
CART season finale. New
CA'f scans showed the movement of two broken vertebrae
in Fernandez's neck. He was
in a nine-car crash at Surfers
Paradise in Australia on Oct.
27.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH ONlY!

Fresh

The Daily Sentinel

the linebacker said.
It's been awhile since
Ohio State (11-0, 6-0 Big
Ten) has had that opportunity. The Buckeyes last won a
national title in 1968, and
three times since then
they've started the season
11 -0.
Each time, they lost the
next game.
A scare last week against
Purdue may help Ohio State
from making it a fourth
,when they travel to Illinois
(4-6, 3- 3~.
·
· "We lose that game and it
(BCS) doesn't mean anything at all. So we have to
finish out these games and
see where we are at the end

of the season," receiver
Mic))ael Jenkins said.
. "We'rewherewewanttobe
in both polls and the BCS."
. Ohio State took over the
top spot in the Bowl
Championship Series standings after last week's 13- 10
road win over Purdue.
Ohio State trailed late in
that game and faced a
fourth-and-) when Jenkins
caught a 37-yard touchdown pass for the winning
score.
Troubles on the road
weren't anything ~ new for
Ohio State. The Buckeyes
have won their home games
Please see OSU, 14 , 1

Driver Tony Stewart climbs into his car for the final practice
session for the NASCAR Checker Auto Parts 500 Saturday at
Phoenix lnternatianal Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (AP)

What kind of champion
will Tony Stewart make?
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) bilities, NASCAR needs its
...- Tony Stewart rolls his eyes c])ampion to be'its million-dolat stupid questions, not hesitat- Jar marketing tool.
ing to point out the absurdity of
Should Stewart successfully
the request. He's often sarcas- hold off Mark Martin in
tic, sometimes downright rude. Sunday's season finale to win
Other times, he's endearing, • the. poi'!ts title, the Indiana
quick with a one-liner, a candid nallve wtll be the poster boy for
opinion or a compliment.
1 the rapidly . growmg sport.
Now the brooding, short- NASCAR wtll tum _to him to
tempered driver who has spent sell the product, the Image, the
most of the past two sea~ons on. eve~t. . .
,
NASCAR probation is on the
It s a_Job m whtc~ some past
verge of his tirst Winston Cup cha!"'!ptons have thrived. . .
championship.
Jeff. Gordon loves the media
For a 3l' year-old man pas: atten!Ion,_ the swmg thr?ug~
sionate only about racing and the momm~ talk s~ow crrcutt
winning, some wonder if he's ~n~ the ~oas.t-to-coa~t appearready willing and able to be ances that accompamed hts
' AR' 1 d'
four tttles.
NASC
s ea mg ambasRusl y WaII.ace Iov ed 1.t, too, .
sador.
"The last time I checked we . proudly boasting how he cut
.
.
'·
vacatiOns short or tlew across
were rac1ng fot: a pomt~ cham- . the country on an hour's notice
ptonfhtp. I don t thmk I 111 run,; to make it to an event when
mng tor P~. l•~t cal office, NASCAR needed its 1989
Stewart sm?. It s not an elect- champion.
ed o!'flce. I ve not tx;en told of
Others struggled with it. ihe
an7. _responsJbthlles. .
late Dale Earnhardt, a sevenIf everybody ts gomg to time champion, cherished his
make ll a lot more complicated, free time . Bill Elliott didn't
I'm going to be pretty disap- want to be bothered so much,
pot~teg, to be perfectly honBut that was a long time a~o,
est.
before NASCAR went mamAlthough there are no written requirements or responsiPlease see Stewart. ,15

h

•

•

•

-- ·-

- -· ·-·

'"

-·-

.

-- --· I - ·"" -· -- - .. ..

I

1
-

- - · · -· - - - - - -·

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�Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Novembe.r 15,

)

...

• Friday, November 15, 2002

•

www.mydailysentlnel.com .

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Scoreboard
Prep Football

Circleville; Matt Bokovltt, Gllllpolla
Galli• Academy_ •
Specia l
mention:
Coif
Sever,

AII· Southeast District
COLUMBUS

(API- The

2002

Assoc1 ated P.ress Southeast AU-District
lootball team , as selected by a media panel
from the dislricl

DIVISION I
First Team
Offense:· Backs-Austin Aohr, Logan, 6-

o. 163. jr

•

Fa1rland. Steve Wnght, Proctorvilt~ Trimble. 6-0, 150, jr.; BaCks Dan
Roglon 11
Fairland; Chris Weave1. South Point Galeti Doeberemer. Waterford, 5-10, 178, sr.;
(4) Cots. Watte""" (8 -4) vs. (2) Cols.
COpley, South Po1nt. Rex Herrold, Wellston; Jimmy Moore, Franklin Furnace Green, 6- OeSales (9-3} ~~ Grove Ciry Stadium
Evan Johnson, Wellston. B1ad Bean, 0, 175, Sf_; Michael Roth, WillOW Wood
Roglon 12
Alexander, ALLAN BROWN, CHESHIRE Symmes Valley, 5-8, 175, sr.; Line-Caleb
(1) Urbana (12.0) vs. (2) Gennantown
RIVER VALLEY , Cody Ball, Stewart Bland. Willow Wood Symmes VaHey, 6-4 , Valley View (12..0) at Dayton Welcome
Federal Hocking, Brice Redman. Westfall; 225, j,., Wayr!fl Smith, Waterford, 6-1, 170. Stadium
la c Sewards, We sttall ; David Grubb, sr : Joe Stout, Waterford, 5-9. 180, jr.;
DIVISION IV
Fairfield Union , Jason Grubb. Fairfield ANTHONY LANE, CROWN CITY SOUTH
All garhla 7:30 .p.m. Friday
Un1on: M1tch Reed, We sH~il ; Bri~n AdamS, GALLIA, 6-2•. 235, SR.; All-purposeRegion 13 .
Belpre
ZACK LEE, CROWN CITY SOUTH
(8) Youngs. Ursuline (7-5} vs. (2) Girard
Honorable mention: Gerald Cadogan , GALLIA, 5-10, 145, JR.
(11-1) at Austintown-Filch Falcon Stadium
Portsmouth; Ryan McGraw, Minford; Matt
· Region 14
Detense· Line-Joseph Patterson , Willow
Lloyd.
Minford .
Mason
Bradbury, Wood Symmes Valley. 6-1 . 195, sr:; Nathan
(11 Kenton (10·21 vs. (6) Archbold (10·2)
McDe rmott Northwest . Dusly Fultz , Pinkerton, Willow Wood Symmes Valtey, 5- at Findlay Donnell Stadium
Wellston, Jason B1andeberry, Alexander; 4, 155, sr.; Sean Wainwright, Waterford, 5Roglon 15
Trav is
Fosler,
Alexander;
LUKE · 10, 150, sr.; Alan Lanning, Glouster
(1) Portsmouth (11 -1) vs. (7) Portsmouth
DEGARMO, CHESHIRE RIVER VALLEY : Trimble, 5·10, l60, sr.; Joe Maiden, W. (10·2) at Ironton Tanks Memorial
Alex Mack, Westfall; . Michael .S1ockum, . Portsmouth
East, 6·3,
320, sr:; Stadium
Fairf1eld Un1on, Joe Frejkowski, Unioto. Linebackers-Alex Heiss, Waterford, 5-9,
Region 16
Brandon Williams. Belpre; Mike Randolph, 190, sr.; Bruce Fouts, Glouste~ Trimble, 8{1) l(ettering Alter {11 ·1) vs. (2) Reading
Belpre, JeH WeNenget, Belpre.
2, 230, so ; Brett Enz, Portsmouth East, 6- (12-0) at Dayton Welcome Stadium
DIVISIONV
DIVISIONV
0, t70. jr.; Backs-Drew Hunt, Willow
Offense : Quarterbacks-MaN Weaver, WOOd Symmes Valley, 6·1, 175, sr.; Billy
All garnea 7 p.m. S.turday
Wheelersburg, 6-2. 170. sr.; Jason Meade, Lee, Waterford, 5-~o . 180, sr., Jacob
Roglon 17
Nelsonville-York , 5-10, 175, sr.: Backs(1) Smithville (12.0) vs. (3) Dalton (11 ·1)
Bowman. Portsmouth No1re Dame, 6-3,
Michael Hunt, Chesapeake, 5-10, 1BO, sr:; 210, sr.
at orrvme Red Rider Stadium
Cody Hunt, Ghesapeake, 5-8, 160, • jr.;
Region 18
Otten,lva player of lhe year: Dan
Adam VanDyke , Nelsonville-York, 5-B. J6S, Doeberelner, Waterford.
(4) Castalia Margaretta {10-2) vs. (6)
sr.; Pat McCloskey, Ba 1 nbridg~ Paint Valley,
Defensive player of the year: JoHph · Delphos St. John's (9·3) at Fostoria
5-9, 210. sr : Col t Lundell. Crooksville, 5- Patlereon, Willow Wood Symmes Valley. Memorial Stadium ·
~
10, 205, sr.; Line-Shane Cooper,
Roglon 19
Co.-ch ot the year: Rutty Webb, Willow
Bainbridge Paint Valley, 6-5 , .265 •. sr.: Zach Wood Symmes Valley.
(5) Chesapeake (9·31 vs. (2) AmandaWaugh, Chesapeake, 6-2, 220. Jr.; Josh
Special mention: JOSH WAUGH, Ciearcreelc (10-2) at Portsmouth Spartan
Childers, Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant, 5- CROWN CITY SOUTH GALLIA; RAFAEL Stadium
11 . 245, sr.; Adam Salyers. Wheelersburg , THELAN, CRCWN CITY SOUTH GALLIA:
Region 20
6-2, 265, sr ; Da11id Henderson, Bainbridge BRYAN
(1) Marion Pleasant (12-0) vs. (2)
·MINEAR,
REEDSVILLE
Paint Valley, 6-5. 295, sr.; Ends- Wes
EASTERN; Malt Owens, Willow Wood Gat)anna Cots. Acad. (11 -1} at Lewis
Romanello, Lucasville Valley, 6-0, 175, St.; Symmes Valley: Cory Burcham •. Willow Center Olentangy Braves Field
Jordan Redfern. Crooksville. 6-2, 180, sr.:
DIVISION VI
Wood Symmes Valley; Justin Holland,
All-purpose back-Pat Shea, Zane Trace, ·
All games 7:30p.m. Friday
Willow Wood Symmes Valley.
6-0, 1"85, sr. Kicke r-Cody Piguet,
Roglon 21
Honorable mention: RICKY WHITT,
Wheelersburg , 6-0, 1eo, sr.
(1) Mogadore (11 -1) vs. (6) Cte.
CROWN
CITY
SOUTH
GALLIA:
Travis
Defense : line-Carl Miller, Oak Hill, 6-2,
McElfresh, Glouster Trimble; CODY Cuyahoga Hts. (9·3) at Ravenna Gilcrest
240. sr.; Jared Arnold , Lucasville Valley, 6Field
FAULK,
REEDSVILLE EASTERN.
3. 225, sr.; Chris Knisley, Bainbridge Paint
Region 22
Valley, 6-4, 304. sr.: Jesse Street. Zane
(1) Columbus Grove (12·0) vs. (2) Tiffin
OHSAA State Playoffs
Trace, 5-10, 185, . sr ; linebackers-Wes
Galven (10 -2) at Uma Bath Stadium
Wolfe. Crooks11ille, 6-1 , 205. sr.. John
Roglori 23
Eldridge, Chillico the Huntington, 6-2, 190,
Regional Finale
(4}' Newark Cath. (8-4) liS. (2) Danville
jr., Todd Marcum, Chesapeake, 5- 10, 175,
DIVISION I
(1 1·1) at Mt. va·rnon Yellow Jacket Stadium
sr., Garron Jordan, Bainbridge Paint Val ley,
All games7 p.m. Saturday unlesa
Roglon 24
6· 1, 215, sr., Blake Kline, Nelson11ille-York,
.. •. noted
(1) Maria Stein Marion Local (11 ·1} vs.
5·10, 160, sr., Backs-Chris Younge ,
Region 1
(2) Dola Hardin Northern (12-Q) at Pi qua
Bainbridge Paint Va lley, 6-6, 1B5, sr.; Tom
(4) Mentor (11 -1 ) vs. {?) Warren Harding Alexander Stadium
Triplett, .Oak Hill, 5-9, 155. sr.; Punter(12-0) at Can ton Fawcett .Stadium
Sean Cawood, Bainbridge Paint Valley, 6·
R1gion 2·
..

Washington Court House; Josh Rodden.
Miami Trace, BUU FACKLER, POMEROY
MEIGS,
TRAVIS
MCKINNISS,
GALLIPOliS GALLIA 1\CADEMY: COLE
HAGGERTY, GALLIPOLIS GALLIA
ACADEMY, MIKE D4VIS, GALLIPOLIS
GALLIA ACAD EMY: NATHAN KIIIIG,
GALLIPOLIS GALLIA ACADEMY; Brett
Eubanks, Greenfield McClain; Jake Loftis,

Greenfield McClain, Dustin Jones,
Circleville; Ed Fellows, Sheridan Honorable mention: Steven Carlisle,
Jackson; Ryan Ouperow, Miami Trace;

Defense L1ne-Tyler Wadsworttl, Logan,
6-Q, 221, sr.
Special mention Steve Call, Logan, 5· 11,
Josh Roberts, M iami Trace: MARC BARR,
189, jr ; Josh Bailey, Logan, 5-10. 175, sr.
POMEROY MEIGS: TOM BOSE,
DIVISION II
ACADEMY :
ONense Ends-Dustin Tyler, Chillicothe, GlLLIPOLIS . GALLIA
SrB, 155. sr , BacKs-Tyler Kelly, Mari_etta, STEVE KENNEY, GALLIPOLIS GALLIA
CL ARKE
SAUNDERS ,
5- 11, 205, sr . Chris HeWitt, Athens, 5-11, ACADEMY:
175, jr : Dust1n Tyler. Ch111icothe, 5-8, 155. GALLIPOLIS GALLIA ACADEMY: Dusty
sr.; QB-Grant Gregory, Athens, 6-2, 190, Daugherty, Green11eld McClain; Aaron
/'- . Adam Renner. Chillicothe, 6-2. 185. sr.. Vaniga, Circleville Logan Elm; Jeff
Une-Aaroh Bnn'Ster, Marietta, 6-1, 215, Robinson. Circleville: ian Thomas.
Sr.. A.J Cousins, Chillicothe. 6-3, 285. sr., Circleville; Jordan Rhodes , Sheridan, Ben
All -purpose-Corey Champlin, Athens, 6· Carpenter, Sheridan ~ So Brandon,
Sheridan; Daniel Z1mmerman. Hillsboro,
0, 180, sr
Defense· Ends-Aaron Ranson, At hens. Curt Bellville, McConnelsville Morgan.
6-2, 190, sr i Kurt Brammer, Marietta, 6-2, Mark ·Filkins. ·McCon nelsville Morgan :
21 0. sr.; Line-Grant GibSon. Chillicothe, Derek Bragg, McConnelsvi lle Morgan.
Scott Alloway, Vincent Warren
B-2. 205, so.; Linebacke~:S-Brady Mallow,
DIVISION IV
'Chillicothe. 6-1, 220. sr.
First Team
Special mention· Adam Miller, MarieHa;
Offense:
Ends-Creed
Miller, Waverly, 6Aaron Coppock, Marietta: Cameron Amigo.
3, 173, sr., Guy Earley, Belpre. 6-3, 180,
ManeHa; Jell Covault, Manetta ; Jesse
sr.; Aaron Slusher, MinfOrd . 5-10, 155, sr ,
Rech, MarleNa : Etiot Niceswinger, Athens;
Shaun Hansel, Unioto, 6-1 , 160, sr ..
Derek Adams, C hil licot~ : · Ben Jones,
Quarterbacks-cra ig Felts, Portsmouth , 6· Chilliccthe
' , 200, sr., Bryan Greenhaw, Waverly, 6-0,
Offensive player ·Of the year : Tyler 175,
sr., Backs-Matt White. Ironton, 6-1,
Kelly, Marietta ,
230, sr : Jere miah Bolden. Portsmouth, 5 Defensive player of 1he year: Kurt
9, 180, sr.; Drew C ~ nnon, New Lexington.
Brammer, Marietta.
5-10. 195, sr.: Josh Peters, Fairfield Union,
Coach of lhe year: Brian Spicer, 5- 10, 175, sr.; Line-D.J Mosley,
Marietta.
Portsmouth, S-9, 228, sr ; Ben Sholl.
Fairt1eld Union, 6-4, 235, jr; David Boren,
DiVISION Ill
First team
Portsmouth, 6-0. 225, sr.: Jeremy Akers,
OHenSe: Ends- Bill Cu llom. Greenfield Ironton, 5-10, 250, jr.; Jordan Barnard,
McClain, 6-0, 170 ,- sr; Matt Tootle, New Lexington, e:4, 273, sr.; Donnie
Circleville, 5-10, 175, sr.; QuarterbackShoemaker, Westfall , 6-4, 350, sr.; Andy
Aaron Pa lmer, Circle11ille, 6.0, 175, sr.; Parsons, Well ston, 5-1 1, 185, sr., All-purBacks-steve Shriner, Sheridan, 5-8, 155, pose Jeremiah Lens, Portsmouth West, 6jr.: TY SIMMONS, GALLJPOLIS .GALUA 1, 180, sr.; Kicker-Nick Davey, Westfall, 6 ACAOEMY, 6·1, 190, SA.; Adam Keaton, 4, 224, sr
·
Washing ton Cour t House, S-9, 210 , sr..
Defense· line-Lance Phillips, Well ston,
Jeremiah Brown, Circlevilltt Logan Elm, 5- 6-1 , 230, so.; Tyler Whaley, Ironton. 6-Q,
8, 160, sr.; Line-Mike Schreiner. 250, sr.: David Schug, Ironton Rock Hill. 6Circleville Loga·n Elm. ·s-1. 24a, sr.; BEN 2, 215, sr.; Nick Erlenwein, ~rtsmout h
DOOLITTLE, GALLIPOLIS GALLIA West, 6-1, 210, sr., Rick Ellis, McDermott
ACADEMY, 6·3, 245, JR .; Jetl Bo len, Northwest. 6-4, 240, sr.; LinebackersJackson. 6-3. 290, sr.; Sean Dunford, Thomas Mayes, Wellston . 5-11 , 186, sr.;
Washington Court. House, 6-6, 260, sr.; Kyle Peters, Fairtield Union, S-11, 170, jr.;
Bryan V1ckers, Circleville, 6-3, 250, sr.: All- Justin Cantrell, Portsmouth We st, 5-11 ,
purpose ·ba ck-OONNIE JOHNSON, 190, sr.: Bryan Cox, Unioto, 6-0, 210, sr.;
GALLIPOLIS GALLIA ACADEMY, 6-0, Jeremy Mathis, Portsmouth, 6-0, 206. sr.;
170, JR .; Kicker- DUSTIN HALL, Backs-Mike Angles, WesHall, 5-10, 180,
GALLIPOLIS GALLIA ACADEMY, 5-7, jr.; Bryson WiHiams, Portsmouth West. 6-0,
165, SA.
165." sr.; James Russell, Ironton Rock Hill,
Defense: Line-Dustin Ellsworth, Miami 6-0, 170, jr.; Tyler Huffman. New Lexington,
Trace, 6- 1, 250, sr.: Jo sh Bra~ken , 6-0 , 175, jr.; Punter-Morgan Johnson,
Circle11itle, 5-5, 155, jr.: Jake Carson, Wellston, 6-1, 175, sr.
Greenfield McClain, B.Q, 225, jr.; Chris
Otlenalve pllyer of the year: · Drew
Shonk,
Sheridan, • 5-B,
155,
Jr.; C.nnon, New Lexington.
Defentlve player af lha ye1r: I homal
Linebackers---,JEREMY
ROUSH,
POMEROY MEIGS, 5·10, 193, SR.: Derrick Mayea, Wellllon. ·
Haithcock, HUtsbOro, 8-3, 220, sr.; Chas
Coach of tht yar: Jon Bolen, Belpre.
McK night, Circleville, 5-10, 200, jr.; Ben
Special
mention:
Zach
Miller, Circleville , 6-1, 200, jr.; JESSE Evans, Portsmouth West Ricky Shlfko,
REITMIRE,
GALLIPOLIS
QALLIA UOioto, Chris Weaver, South Point; Zach
ACADEMY, 5·10; 180, SR.; BacksTaubenhe lm, Proctorville Fairland; Rand y
Dominique Burns, Hillsboro, 5-7, 145, sr.; Winegardner, FairUeld UniOn; Eric
Troy Brown, Washington Court House, 5-8, Hartman, Fairfield Union; Luke Gibson.
150, jr.; Tyler 'Altier, Shei-idan, 6-0, 160, sr.; Belpre; Josh Sands, Ironton ; Lewis
Punter-Ryan Venham, Warren Vincent, 5- Copeland, Waverly; Andrew Bodager,
)1, 185, sr.
Waverly; Joe Schackert , McDermott
Offensive player of tht y11r: Ty Northwest; Daniel Murphy, Ironton; Jeff
Slmmona, Galllpol/1 Gall/a Academy.
Pleasant, ironton; Jason Cutlip. Ironton;
Defentlve player of the year: J11u Joey Mays, Ironton Rock Hill; Sean Primm,
Reltmlre, Galllpolla Galli• Academy.
.,. . Ironton Rock. Hill; Nathan Litteral, Ironton
Coachee o1 the year: K1lth Downing, Rock H ill ; T~ler Bowman,. Proctorville

o, 21 o. sc

(5) Spring. South (9·3) vs. (2) Findlay (1 1·

Offensive player of the year: Man 1) at Marion Harding Stadium
Weaver, Wheelersburg.
Region 3
Defensive player of the year: Chris
(B) Massillon Washington (10-2) 11s, (2)
Younge , Bainbridge Paint Valley.
Pickerington (11 -1 ) at· Mansfield Arlin Fteld
Coach of the year: Pete Hollon,
.
Region 4
Bainbridge Paint Valley.
(1) Cin. Elder (11 -1 ) liS. (3) Cin. Colerain
Special mention: Chase Morris, ('1 1·1), 8 p.m. at Univerisity ol Cincinnati
Bainbridge Paint Valley: Chris White, Nippert Sta dium
Bainbridge Paint Valley; Chad Berry,_,
DIVISION II
Ne fsonville-York ;
Man
Rucker,
All g1me1 7:30p.m. Friday
Chesapeake; Daniel Fraley, Cheseapeake;
Region 5
·
Tim Elliott, Coa t Grove Dawson-Bryant;
(5) Olmsted Falls (10·2) vs. (6) Warren
Jeromy
Detty,
RiChm!&gt;nd
Dale Howland (9~31 at Bedford Stewart Fteld
Southea stern; Derek Pafk, Chillicothe
Region 8
,
Huntington; Zac McFadden, Bainbridge · (1) Tot . St. Francis (11·1) vs. (3) Cola.
Paint Valley; Shane Merriman , Zane Trace; Walnut Ridge (11 -1) at Tiffin Frost-KalnoW
Danny Miller, Crooksville; Justin Wiseman, Stadium
Zane Trace ; Jim George, Zane Trace: Zach
Region 7
McCoy, LucasvitJeVa!ley.
. (4) Macedonia Nordonla (1 1-1) va. (2)
Honorable mention: Rhett Starr. A\IOn Lake (11 -1 ) at Parma Byers Field

~~a:~~{tR~~"t:n~~g~:~~ ~8~~~~~;~
0

York: Rya[l Burkitt, Piketon ; Adam
Lamerson, Piketon; Keith Shanks, Pi~eto n;
Drew Bobb. Bainbridge Pain1 Valley; Travis
Tatman, Bainbridge Paint Valley; Michael
Trainer, Richmond Dale Southeastern.

DIVISION VI

.(1) Kings Mills

~~~(1~·0) vs. (2) Day.

Chamlnade-.)~lienne (11 -t)

at

Cincinnati

Princeton Viking Stadium
DIVISION Ill
All g1m11 7 p.m. S1turday
Reg ton 9
.

(1) Clo. Benedictine {10· 2)

vo. (6) Lisbon

6- 1, 175, jr.; R.J. Andrews, Glouster

Beaver Local (10-2) at Canton Central
Catholic Stadium

Trimble, 6·1 , 175, sr, JASON MERRICK,
CROWN CITY SOUTH GALLIA, 6·4, 170,

Region 10
(I ) Akr. Buchtel (12·0) vs. (2) Akr. Hoban

Offense: Ends-Tra11is Barth , Water;tord,

JR.; Quarterback-A. J. Jenkins~ Glouster

(11-1) at Barberton RudyShar~ey Field

Pro Basketball

National Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
. Atlantic Dlvltlon
W
1. Pet.

Boston ................. 6
New Jersey .......... 6
Orlando ...............6
Philadelphia ........ 5
Washington ..... ... 5
Miami... ........... ... 1
NowYork .... ........ 1

2
2
3
3
4
5

"7

GB

.750

4

5

.667

3

San Al1tonlo ......... 5

4

.558

3.5

M in~es ota ........... 4

5

.44A

4.5

Utah .. . ................. 3
penver
... 2
Memphts .. ............

6
5

.333
.286
.000

5.5
5.5
·8

o

8

· GB

POO&amp;nix . .

.. 4

3

.5
1.5

_571

5 .375
:J
6 .333
3.5
6 .250
4
7 .222
4.5
Thuraday•• Games
WaShington 105, Utah 102
Philadelphia 99, San Antonio 94
Orlando 101 , L. A. Clippers 80 •
Friday's Games
Denver at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Milwaukee at Indiana. 7 p.m.
Dallas at Boston, 8 p.m.
Utah at Detroit, 8 p.m
New J8fsey at Miami, 8 p.m.
M innesota at Memphis, 8 p.m.
Chicago at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.
Sacramento at SeaHte, 10 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Portland, 10 p.m
Houston at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m.
Golden State at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
Salurday'a Games
Philadelphia at New York," 1 p.m.
Miami at Washington, 7 p.m.
·
New Orleans at Attanta,-7 p.m.
Del1\ler at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Cleveland, 7 :30 p.m.
Dallas at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
Indiana at Minnesota, e p.m.
Memphis at ChicaQo, 8:30 pm.
Boston at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Orlando at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

LA Clippers ...... 3
Portland ............ 3
LA Lakers .......... 2
Golden State ....... 2

VOLLEYB
ONYO
lNG SEASON
•

T~ansactions
BASEBALL
American League

DETROIT

TIGERS- Named

won19 Lost4

Bob

Raymond vice president of tiCket sales and ·
service.
NEW 't"'RK YANKEEs-Exercised their
2003 option on the contract ol LHP Andy
PeHitte.

NATION IlL LE4GUE

•TVC ockinu
Division Champions
• Sectio C.hampions
•
ct Champions
• Regional Se i·Finalist

CINCINNATI REDs-Named Dave Miley
manager, Mack Jenkins pitching coach and.
Adrian Garrett hitting coach for Louisville of
the IL. Named Rick Burleson managEtr, Ed
Hodge pitching coach and Jay Sorg hiHing
coach for Billings of the Pioneer League.
Named Edgar Caceres manager, Jeff Gray
pitching coach and Bobby Williams hitting
coach for the GCL Reds of the Gulf Coast
League. Named Kevin Barr minor league
strength and conditioning coordinator.

,.

National Football League

CINCINNAti

BENGALS-Waived

T

Mario Monds. Promoted DT Ron Smith
from ·the practice Squad and signed him to
a tWQ-year contract.

CLEVELAND BROWNS-SI~ned DT
Oamten Gregory trom the pract1ce actuad
and DB Raymond Walls lo the practice

squad.
HOCKEY
Nattan11 Hockey Lugue

ANAHEIM MIGHTY OUCK5-Signed F
Jaffrey lupu! to a three-year CQntract.

FLORIDA PANTHER5-Aoolgnod

G

Wade. Flaherty to Sao Antonio of the AHL.

NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Placed F Jay
Pandolfo on the Injured list

NASHVILLE P~EOATORS-Piacod . D

Andy DelfTlore and C Domenlc PIHia on the
injured list.
,

OTTAWA SENATORS-Assigned F Brad
Smyth to Binghamton of the AHL and G
Mathieu Chouinard to Peoria Of the ECHL.
PHILADELPHIA FLYER5-Reoallod FNV

...
".

Mark Greig from Philadelphia ot the AHL.

..

,.,

I

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Friday, November 15, 2002

Friday, November 15, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 5

•

our offense, but at the same
time our lack of execution or
lack of putting points on the
board isn't due to him not
being healthy."
Healthy or not, the Buckeye
keep winning.
With Claret! spending as
much time on the sideline as
on the field, Ohio Slate has
managed to stay in games by
keeping the scoring down. The
. Buckeyes are giving up a conference-best 12 points a game
while allowing just 77 yards
rushing.
Still, , their recent struggles
· ed
haven 't ~one unnottc ·
''They re still a good team
d
•
· t h
t
an were gomg 0 ave 0
bring our A-game to beat
them." Illinois receiver Walter
Young said. "But we're not
scared of anx team we .play.
They're no different."

Clarett
from PageB1
quarter and faced fourth-and-!
at the Purdue 37-yard line.
Instead of handing the ball off
to Clareti. quarterback Craig
Krenzel threw a wobbly pass
Michael Jenkins caught for the
gam~-~ining score with 1:36
remam mg.
Clarett h;ld 52 yards rushing
on 14 carries against Purdue,
and he hasn't had a touchdown in more than a month
after scoring 15 in the team's
first seven games.
Krenzel refuses to blame.the
offertse ·s woes on Clarett.
"I don't feel that it's as
much Maurice as just us executing," he said. "Maurice
brings a definite element to

.osu

from Page B1
by an average of 27 points a
game. On the road, the margin
drops down to 6 points.
· Tight end Ben Hartsock,
who scored the winning
touchdown against Wisconsin,
Said unlike previous years, the
. Buckeyes are winning the
close calls on the road.
"I think we've been very
fonunate, but I think good
things happen to teams that do
the small things," he said. "As
poorly as the offense hils been
playing, never once has a
defensive player or the
defense as a whole e.ver gotten
down on us or doubted that
we 'II come through when we .
need to."
There were plenty of doubts
about Illinois. after a bleak 1-5
start. But the Illini have played
better of late and are actually
in a position .to qualify for a
postseason bowl game with
wins in their final two games
against Ohio State and
Northwestern.
Illinois has the top passing
offense in the Big Ten despite
swapping quarterbacks Dustin
ward and Jon Beutjer in and
out of the lineup. Beutjer, who

started the season on the
bench, t~w four touchdown
passes in a 37-20 win over
Wisconsin last week after
Turner had named him the
slarter for the rest of the year.
Illinois should have receiver
Brandon Lloyd back in the
lineup. Lloyd, fourth in the
league in receiving, was sidelined ·after three series against
Wisconsin with a strained hip ·
flexor.
The Illini also hinted earlier
in the week they may take a
few shots at two-way starter
Chris Gamble, who plays
receiver on offense and defensive back for the Buckeyes.
"I hope he does well in the
future, but we 'II have s.omething ih store for him this
weekend," Walter Young said.
"We'll be looking forward to
that. If he plays both ways the
whole game then·in the fourth
quarter we'll be looking to do
some things."
.
Other teams have tried and
failed.
Gamble returned an interception for a touchdown as a
cornerback and made a touchdown-saving tackle as a wide
receiv.er against Penn Slate.
He has four interceptions on
the season, including one last
week against Purdue, and is
tied for third in the Big Ten.

Roush can't get enough of racing :
NEW YORK (AP) - Jack
All four of his Cup drivers
Roush was 1alking animatedly are in the top 12 in the season
about his favorite subject: auto points and have combined to
racing.
give their boss nine victories
The NASCAR team owner - a terrific · season by any
hunched forward in his chair, measure, especially after a
furrowing his brow as he disheartening 2001.
made a point. Silling in the
Beyond that, Roush is just
rear of driver Mark Martin's feeling lucky to be alive these
hauler
at
Phoenix days.
International Raceway last
The head of · Roush
. weekend, Roush felt right at Industries, an engineering and
home. ·
prototype development com"l'm just Joe Racer," he pany employing more than
said, sitting back and letting a 1,700 people - independent
grin spread over his weathered of Roush Racing - survived
face.
the crash of a small experiThe 60-year-old Roush , mental aircraft into an
who fields cars in Winston Alabama lake while visiting
Cup, the Busch Series and friends on his birthday, April
NASCAR's truck series, is 19.
even more charged up than
"I didn't see a telephone
usual as the season comes to wire and it flipped me into the
an end Sunday with the Miami lake," said Roush, a longtime
400 in Homestead; Fla.
pilot. "I drowned, but a real
Greg Biffle already has · hero, Larry Hicks, dived into
given him the Busch champi· the . water ·and brought me
onship, and Martin, the driver back.''
who has been with him since
Hicks, a retired Marine and
Roush started his NASCAR a former instructor of underteam in 1988, goes into water rescue, just happened to
Sunday's seasoit finale in be fishing from the dock
Homestead, Fla., with a behind his home when the
chance - though slim - . to plane hit the water upside
overlake Tony Stewart for the down. He pulled Roush out of
title.
the water and onto the wing of

Managers
from Page B1
roll, Minaya won't be able to
keep the team intact.
Selig expects Frank
Robinson to return as manager in Montreal. .
Selig also addressed
minority hi rings, a minimum
age for bat boys, potential
changes to the format of the
All-Star game, and the
Yankees' pursuit of Japanese
slugger Hideki Matsui.
Of . the eight managers
hired .since the end of the
season. San Francisco's
Felipe Alou is the only
minority. The Chicago Cubs

her feet and ller hands.
"It was my 60th birthday •
when I went into the water in
Troy, Ala., and if I could hav"
given those young men back
their legs at 24 years old, and
that young woman her hands
and feet back, they could have
left me in the water," Roush
said, his voice cracking with
emotion.
''I never had that feeling
before in 'my life. That's given
me a better appreciation for
how lucky I've been for all the
acc(dents that I've missed. I'rri
60 years old and I never had a
broken bone before."
Roush said he never worried
about how his company was
being run in his absence.
Mostly, he just wanted to get
back to the racetrack.
"Racing is .about 25 perceni
of the company," ·Roush said:
"I've got a management team
in place that runs the engineering business. They call me in
occasionally when they need
me for some sales or strategic
meeting of consequence with
a customer or supplier. I'll be
called in to provide the neces:
sary commitment for the com:
pany if they think they need it
at my level.''

the plane before getting him
breathing again.
Roush came away with a
head injury and multiple fmclures to his left leg.
.
·''Larry's a friend for hfe
now, as you might guess," he
said.
Roush, an intense man used
to getting his way, has made a
remarkable recovery. He
walks with only the barest hint
of a limp and, except for a titanium rod in his thigh and
some rnetal plates and screws
in his ankle and foot, there's
not much to physically remind
him of that frightemng day.
Mentally, it's a different
story.
"The accident did change
me, but not what you think,"
Roush said.
After spending 12 days in
the University of Alabama
Center
10
Medical
Birmingham, Roush was
flown to the University of
Michigan Hospital in Ann
Arbor to begin physical therapy.
Working alongside him
were two young men with
spinal injuries that left them
paraplegics and a young
women who had lost both of

are expected to add to that
when they finalize . a deal
with Dusty Baker. None of
the four finalists in Seattle ·
are minorities.
In all, baseball will have
seven minority managers
after Baker is hired - two
fewer than at the end of the
season. Selig has made
diversity a priority, requiring
teams to interview minority
candidates for job openings.
. 'The clubs are following
the memorandum to a tee,"
he said. "I have no complaints with anybody. It's
hard to tell people who they
should hire. I just want them
to take advantage of ·.the
whole pool of candidates out
there."
·
Selig said there would be

Me;qs High School sports banquet

·.
.
an age requirement for bat innings.
Selig also said his office is
boys next season, · although
he wouldn't predict what it keeping a close eye on the
pursuit of Matsui, one of this
would be.
That comes in response to year's most coveted free
3-year-old Darren Baker, agents.
Four Yankees officials left
who was nearly hurt at home
plate in Game 5 of the World for Japan on Thursday to .
Series after he ran out to announce a working agree~
retrieve a bat while the ball ment with the Yomiuri
Giants. Yomiuri happens to
was still in pia~.
Selig also sa1d he is in dis- be Matsui's former team. :
cussions about changes · to
Major league teams
the All-Star game. ·He was weren'\ allowed to negotiat~
booed in his hometown in · with Matsui until Tuesday,
Milwaukee when this ye&lt;~r's but the Yankees have been in
game was called a tie after talks with the Giants much
11 innings after both teams of the year.
ran out of pitchers.
"We have an agreement
Baseball could increase with Japan, and we willroster size or encourage make sure it is followed,"
managers to reserve a couple Selig said. "We continue to
of extra pitchers for extm follow it very closely:"

FOOTBALL AWARDS -· Buzz Fackler 1st t~am Ali-TVC, Jeremy Roush 1st team AII-TVC, CQ-Qffensive MVP (Ohio Division), left'to right, received football awards at last week's annual fall spor,ts
banquet.

''
'.

I

I
•

I
I

VOLLEYBALL .-AWIIRDS - Nikki Butcher 2nd team AII-TVC, Katie Jeffers 2nd team AII·TVC CHEERLEADER AWARDS- Katie Reed, Rosanna Dillard, Heather Phalin, Hannah Woolard, left
ljonorable mention All-district, Mindy Chancey 1st team AII-TVC All-District, Jaynee Davis 1st to right, were recognized and presented cheerleading awards at Meigs' annual sports banquet
team AII-TVC All-District , Kayte Dayis 2nd team Ali-TVC Honorable mention All-District were recip- last week.
ients of volleyball awards at the annual Meigs fall ·sports banquet.
•

ACADEMIC
AWARDS
Presented all TVC academic
awards at the banquet were,
left to right, Emily Story,
Mindy Chancey, Samantha
Pierce, Katie Jeffers, Allison
Williamson; second row,
Brandon Grover, Eddie Fife,
Matt O'Brie·n, Chrissy Miller,
Kayte Davis, Jaynee Davis

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'The sport is so much bigger
"The biggest thing about today than it was when I was
from Page B1
being champion is the extra championfand even then, you
.
demands on your time," said got pulled in so many different
·
·· .
. · Bobby Labonte, Stewart's directions," he said. "You need
~tream and set goals of ~mg teammate and the 2000 to find a way to do everything
10 reach markets such as New Winston Cup champion.
that a good champion is
York and . Los Angeles.
''There are so many things expected to do and still have
NASCAR Will need Stewart to away from the nice track that time for what's imporlant to
I:!elp out.
NASCAR needs you to do, so you
· He could be perfect for the many more appearances ·for
"I think that ( 1992 champijob, ~cause ~hen Stewart IS
our sponsors, for your fans. I on) Alan Kulwicki struggled
on, he s enterlammg. He JOk~ ~ink Tony can handle all that, with that. There was so many
!)is way through last season s but when it slarts to cut into the other things he had to be bothawards
causmg
. you .d use on the ,~. 1_ngs
·
·
thahceremony,
people
at the tune
ered wtt· h, he cou ldn't enJOY
•
1
1
000
l!lore .
•.
.
you really want to be domg, his championship the way he
~ackh·ttte affmr to burst mto · that's when it starts to be a lit- wanted to, which was just by
.,.ug
ract'ng ·"
•
· But er.
it's· a role he may be t1e fru strat'mg. " .
reluctant to fulfill. When . it
When the Wmston. Cup
Wallace believes Stewart has
comes 10 racing, Stewart only garage close~. Stew~rt hkes to had so many off•track distracc
wants 10 think about the car !md a local dut race he can run lions in his four Winstbn Cup
. and the track. Those who know 10 later that mght; ~e pref~rs to seasons that handling duties of
Stewart recognize that he hates eat at McDonald s m old Jeans a chamton would be a walk in
Oothing more than being and a wrinkled ~-shirt.
. the par ·
forced to do things.
Gordon has satd the .week m
"He's been through so many
· NASCAR isn't worried New York as ch~p1on was ups and downs and highs ~d
about Stewart.
one of the greatest times of h!s lows and up and down agam,
. "In the broad sense, a cham- life. For ~tewart . to enJOY 11, that this is his for him to figure
pion is called on to represent &lt;:!ardon satd hew. til have to be out how to enjoy," Wallace
NASCAR and 1am convinced h1mself.
,
.
said. "If he wins it, he's earned
rt.e can m~t that challenge," . "What Tony s g~t to reahze . it and he's earned the right to
$aid NASCAR vice president IS that he 1s. who he ts, ge_t co.~: be any kind of champion he
Jim Hunter. "He is definitely fortable With -~~· de~l wtth It,
waAnntsdt~h~·~· what Stewart has
aot vanilla, he is Nea~litan, Gordon sa1d. Don t get. J?3d
be
ebody cnl!Cizes always intended to do. In
Ofid you get a little bit o everycause som .
.
"Rebel With a Cause," a book
the_ way you d,td or sa1d ~ornethinlg with Tony Stewart.
Subscriber's Name------- + - - - ' - - - - - . opm1on
. . , about his rookie season,
: "We know he can charm thmg. If th.at ~ your
illa
when
he
wants
to.
We
m.
an
•.
go
w1th
1t.
Suck
w1th
11,
Stewart
revealed
both
the
good
Godz
and the bad of his enigmatic . Address ·- - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - -also know that when he puts on nd.~ tt ou~.
. . .
his game face and gets ready to
. And JUSt say, Th~s ~s the. personality.
City/State/Zip -----~--------face, leavfY him alone, get out kind of champiOn,. this 1s. t~e
"I am what I am; take me or
Df the way.''
kind of race car driv~r. this IS leave me," Stewart wrote. "If Phone____________________________
. Since he punched a photog- the kind of personahty that I you don't like what you get,
iapher following an August have.:"
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Elhott, the 1988 champ1on, there are 50 other guys, and
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GOLF AWARDS- Receiving golf awards at the Meigs banquet were, left to right, Jeremy Banks
1st team AII-TVC, Ben Bookman Jack R Slavin coaches award, Josh Ray 2nd team AII-TVC, left
to right, were presented golf awards at the annual Meigs sports banquet.

- -

• ... ·-··•-

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�www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, .November 15,2002

UCrtbune- Sentinel- l\e t)ter
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~------- Clerk position: Please subFOUND· Black &amp; Brown mit letter ol interest and re·
{Tlale Rat Terrier, Bulaville sume 10 the Tupp8rs Plains
Pike, (740)446·2485
Regional Sewer District,

............ ..

::..;;=:.:;;------

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Mollohan arpet, 202 Clark
~
1 R d Po
Oh ·
...,..,ape oa • rter,
io.
(740)446·7444 Hl77·830·
9162. Free Estimates, Ea~
financing, 90 days Same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card·.
Drive- a- littlfl save alot

3 bedroom house In Bidwell,
reference required, no peta.
$550 month, $550 deposit.
taking
applications.
(740)245- 1418
..:.....:...._ _ _ _ _ _ _

Opportunity.
,---------Furnished 3 rooms + bath,
upstairs, dean, no pets.
Reference &amp; deposit re·
Quired. {740)446-1519

ThermoLare Gas floor heater, SO,OOO BTU, like new.
used one season. Pd. $856,
will lake $500; Hooser stv.,
cabinet, good condition,

14X80 1996 Norris Mobile
Home 3 br., 2 fuWbaths with
garden tub. . 2 Fuli Size
decks. Recently re.carpet.
ed. Excellent condition. Call

~

3br. Hous'e located iri Ma- F~rnis,hed Ef.ficienc ies, all !=nve~b~~s.o;~l~~~:~
s-;m, wv $495. + U1ili11es. utilities paid, share bath, steel sink &amp; stove hood.
N Pet (304)773 5881
$135
th 919 2 d A
1973 Greerbrlar 12X65 Mo- 0
s.
man '
n
ve· $600
for all. Call (740)361nue, (7401446·3945
7 t 56
bile Home, 12X16 room 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St,
:..:::.::....,-------""
built on, must be moved $325 mo. (740}446-3945
Gallia Manor Apartments, used fumlture store, 130
$3000 (740) 985·3673
·
138
Buhl
Morton Ad., Bulaville Pike. We sell malFamily Owned Home- 3 Gallipolis now accepting ap· tresses, bunk beds, dresft1994 5 chutt 16X72 Mobile bedroom, 2 bath house in plications for a 1 Bedroom, ers, couches, applianceS.
Home Priced 10 sell Quick town on Henkle Avenue, HUD, Subsidized apartment much more . Grave manuCall (740) 385-2434
references a must- $450 a tor elderly and handicap· . ments. (740 )446 _4782 GatMUST, 'SELL BY THE END month, 1/2 month rent de· ped. (740}446-4639. Equal lipolis, OH.
•
OF OCTOBER! COLE'S posit (740)388-8070. En- Housing Opportunity
MOBILE HOME Athens closed bact-; porch, concrete ::-'=.
.c..= = - - Whirlpool washer, $95; t&lt;ertOhio 1740) 592_1 72, on oc~ coverf!d front porch.
Gracious hvl n~- 1 and .2 more dryer, $95; Retri ger~•
bedroom apartments at VII- tO $95 lOCI '
$=·
caslon we have a diQnlay
MOB"~
range.~I~
'"'l"'
u.r. HOMES
lage Manor and RIVerside Upr, · ht ;Fe ezriC $125
home that doesn't sell. We
.
re er
: '-'CII.......
c.
FOR n.-_.
a ...artments .1n ·Middleport
· ng
have one s ch hO
ru:..l'll
,.,..
· nc gas range , very n1....:r
u
me now.
From $278$348 Call 740 $95
W"'l
f
'
,-,
New 16 X. eo three bed- '
.'
.
\
.
. 1 ; lnr poot.re r~Q~Brator,
992-5064 Equal Housing l'k
1
d $350
1 e new, amon
room, 2 Bath home at a' 14x70MobileHome·2bed·
.'.
•
;
OpportUnitieS
Whll
I
h /d
e!
used home price come see room, 2 ·bath, porch, n-.,
rpoo was erd t ryer
"'"
$275 s01I'd
bl8 sit"·
Lynn or Ernie today and carpet, all electric, nice tot, Honeysuckle Hills Apart·
.;
woo a
w l'
check out yo.ur savings. storage building, no pets. menls located behind Colo- chairs, $ 125, S~aggs Appll76
Remember, ·we tnUs1 .se tt by $350 9eposit, $350 month niaf Drive behind Highway ances,
VIne Street,
74 4 7
the end ot qctoberl
rent, you pay utilities. Refer· Patrol Post 1 BR now avail· 1 0) 46- 398
ences req uired. Available able. Rent starts S245/ Good Used Appliances Re•
Must sell! OWner moved, around December 1st· lo· month. Low &amp; mo~erate in· conditioned ahd Gu8rai'J'I
2001 Oakwood 14x70, 3BR, cated oH SA 160 in Porter come.. Equal Housing Op- · teed. Washers, Dryer.,·
2 bath , all appliances, Area . Cal! (740)446-4614 portunity. (740)446·3344 or Ranges, and Aefrigeratorswasher &amp; dryer includl'd. tor more information. Appli· TDD 1-BQ0-750-0750.
Some start at 595 . Skaggl
central air. with deck, Make cations accepted M-F/ 8•
.
Appliances, 76 Vine St '
.
down payment &amp; take over 5pm at 1403 Eastern A¥e· ~rge 2br. ~11ances . fUr- (740)446 •7398
.
t
1
$370 month mortage pay· nue, Gallipolis, OH.
mshed. Deposrt requ 1red.
menta. (21 6)351·7086
HUD
accepted.
$265.
Jimmy totaii•Y
N
t
'd
BD, all electric, ·~ . Water (304)675-7783
Congratulations! You have
2
4
2003
ow
WI e. 0 nly
..r.
~
o.:.:...:.::.:..:..=:.:..---- won 2 ~oo movie tickot~
$799 down a·nd only !trash incluued, references Modern 1 bedroom apart· to the Spring Valley 7 i(1
$159.45 . Call Nikki, 740· and
de'poslt
required men!, no pets, $235 month, Gallipolis. Call the Tribune
385·7671 .
$300.00 mon!h (740) 247· Includes water, ,$too depos· tor details. 1740)446·2342
:::::::.:::..:;_____ 0402
it. (740)4-46·3617
'
New Mobile Home only
·
$14,995, all singlewldes on 2 bedroom mobile home, aU Now Taking ApplicationsSPoR11NG
:
clearance, save thousands, 'electrK::. Spring Valley area. 35 West 2 Bedroom Town- --:..
GooDs
•
(304)675-7875
5639

or {304)675-

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(740)446·6t61
~~~t53-1~~~sRI :i;~outh
3 bedroom, Garfield Ave - of Nelsonville
nue, Gallipolis, OH owner :::.:.:.:::::::::::::::__ _ _
financing $49 000 $4 000 Nice lots available for up to
down, ' $365 · mOnth 16x80 mobile homes, $115
(304)9r8.0664
.water included, (740)992·
b
:.21:.:6::.7_ _ _ _ _ _ _
3 or . 4 edrooms, 2 baths,
basement. New wt'ndows, Palestine Ad , 17 miles to
sldlnn, root HVAC, plumb· Milton, 8 miles to Rts 2 &amp;
··w
ing, wirinn. Garage, covered 35, close to Toyota &amp; 25 mi·
"'lll
patio, large yard. COnven· nutes from Huntington.
ient Grape Street (740)446· Beautiful 14M75 shingle, vi·
3~08 after 6:oopm.
nyl, 95 model on totally level
::.:.;:::.:::;:::...::;:~:.::;.--- lot, solid block foundation, 2
3 year old Brick Ranch, bed, 2 baths with 100 many
3,000+ sq.ft. 2-112 acres, inground pool, storage build- features to list. $45,000
ing, excellent n&amp;lghborhood, Owner Finance with $4,000.
down
$500
month.
740 446 149
(
)
-0
(304)5.62·5840
Brick Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2
v
bath, garage, on river, 5
rARMS
miles south of Gallipolis
FOR SALE
. (740)441-8817
...._
·
J 11 N 1
Camp/ Boating facl!lty on •nn •r ~·
Beautiful Raccoon Creek, CongratulatiOns!. Y&lt;;&gt;u have
G
.
won .2 free movte tickets to
allia County. Choice prop·
.
.
erty with 16x24 A- frame. 1.he ,S prng Valley 7 . 1n Gal·
$56 500 tlrm. (740)888· hpohs. Call t.he Register to6657
day for detaiiS.{3 04)675·
,;:t3;;3~3-...,_""'l'_ _..,
1. story br~ house, 3 BR .
Bus ,
I"
1·112 bath, clOse to hospital,
JNESS
low maintenance. Call
AND BUD..DINGS
(740)448-2290

•

~:~6~.~~iJ~~~7~g):;t: ~ur Apa~monls, lnc~udes

produe1 TODAY
·Call: Jeanie

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~~~~~~~~-g 6~~~;~~~~~ fo~

Mechanical knowledge re ·
quired, references &amp; Valid
. drivers license a must·
Knowledge of Gallia &amp; M8·
$on County area a plus. Call
(740)446~ 45 14 M·F/ B-5 for
more into or appllcalions ac·
eepte~ at Christians ConEastern
it ru Ct1on ' 1403
. .
·
,..• venue . Galltpolts ·
·- - - - - - - - Qnvers to transporl cars tO
4 from auction, call between
10am -6pm, (740)·992·0867.

j

th~ e:s~:~0fZst gr~n~ ~S:di:

Help wanted caring tor
elderly,'~arst .G.roup Home,
now paying minimum wage,
new ShiftS: 7am-.3pm, 7amspm , 3pm-1 1pm, 11pm·
7am, call 740-992-5023.

cal .eq~ipment ca. In our
GallipoliS, OH store; Send
resume to Medi·HOf!!e
Care, P.O. Box 987, Galilpoils, OH 45631 Ann: Joh~
Kearns or stop by Medl·
LPT LPTA to r home health H.o~e Care to get an appll·
svcS Choices availa ble lor cGat&lt;lol.n. 41.30 seOcoHnd A4v5o6n3ue,'
th
t.
a 1PO ts,
•
e coun 1es or areas
)
• Bo
se rve d cu rre ~tly prov1·de 1740 446 3 8
·
·1n Jao..f'l
•" on. Metgs,
.
.
5 ecur 1ty Guarda full t1me
servtces
Athens, Gallia, Vinton, and $6.50
per hour. Call
southern Washington coun- (30 4)926 -0641 M·F after
t1es Call (740) 286-6631
4pm.Ask ror Keith EOE.
~

BUsiNEss

I

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$

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or visit website:
www.herbsndlet.com

' J:ull blooded
... .....,,l'lftles 4 females 1 male
• •·~ •
•
·
• Wormed &amp; Tails docked,
: (740)367-()009
• Full stock Float puppies, 12
: weeks old~ variety of colors,
. ijood squmel stock, ,$125
each; Full stock Mlnlalure
:Rat Torrler puppies, 4
,months old, shots, wormed,
·$150 each. German Shep'herd puppies, CKC regis·
lered females, 12 weeks
old, shota, wormed, $225
each. C.n mHt part YfiY.
(501)788-2814

i'oklngeso puppy, AKC, le·
hlale, fawn, white markings,
blaCk mask, 12 weeks old,
1111 shots &amp; wormed. Make
111co Christmas gift. $400
(740)446·1000 leavo mea·
:88
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t~aJr~:J ~~~'k~ater

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GooDS

I

Email: bladesD:zapllnk.com

VANS &amp;
4-WDs

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•Newltonl
•Ga&amp;giS
•()AIJI I RettiJdlllljj

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740..992·1671

7122/TFN

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stl,mp Grinding
• Bucket TNek
Open 9am·5pm
l'r.o C1111!110101 , fiiC 1n homl P,ICk\lp
Calll.llfotlllytU~nNib

(740) 446-1812
AJ.l UJ trbo111 our

S,nokt Plnnsf

Longaberger/Dresdcn
Bus Trip
Sat., November 30, 2002
$65 .()(). Space Limited
Deadline: Oct. 20, 2002
Everyone ieceiVes a

1

1982 Chevy 4)C4 Restored,
everything new, power win·
dows. Must Seol 59,500.
(304)675-4363

r46

750 East State Street . Phone (740)593-661'11
Athens, Ohio

JONES'

~ually,

00 Cummu-.gs engine, 5
speed, $9500; 2002 Conti'
nental Cargo Trailer with living quarters, 4 wheel brake,
$4500. (740)38B·9327
95 Chevy Sllveraoo 2:.21
Ext. Cab, tSOO, V·B, auto:
excellent condition. S9995,
(740)446'·2927
:....;.::.;==...;__ __
Sale or trade for 4-wheeler,
as Dodge 314 ton, runs
great extras on motor.
(740)388·1124
'

basket !!! Call:

DEER

E'6 GREE H SE
~~~ 5 Quality,
Variety, Low Prices

HighBl Dry
Seff·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PROCESSinG

""

Gmve Blankets $5.00.$25100'
Wreaths $10 Er up .
Silk Poinsettias 94t ea 'i~·
Swags $5.00 Er up · , · ,
'...

Gooa Selection of Shrubs.

lake

1

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

740-949-2734

MoroRCYCW .. •

1999 Honda 400 Foreman
4x4 , • excellont condition,
120 hOurs, garage kept
(740)446·6088 mornings. ,

MANUYS
SELF STORAGE

Story &amp; Clark plano, oxcel· 2002 Honda Foreman ES
lont
condition,
$650. Low
Milos
$3,000.
(740)887·8535
(304)675·3711
.
I \1&lt;\ l"tl 1'1'1 11 ;-.,
,\ I I' I -. 1( H }..

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

I

(lO'x'lD' 610'x201

• Tonneue

Cover •

Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line
Other Accessories
'I

'

\,, ·I"

' " II II

II

I "

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

\ ll ddli 111111 { l hlil

(740) 446·1044

(740) 992-5822

Monday-Friday 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2pm

. For all your Home
Improvement needs
"No Job To Small"

J6S UECTRIC 6
PLUmiiiRG

(740) 992-3194
992-6635
B.D.CODSTRUCTIOD

Jim Ruerk
El«&lt;lrlc, Plumbing,
and Small Home
Malnlenanoe Job•

(340 773-5412

992·297

Cell 304 674-30112

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
i SERVICE
1

l • Room Addlllono &amp;

.•
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, -·,,
~
'

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, _ _ _ f&gt;looo _ _

.......-.-...... __.--..

Billy Goat (polled) 112 Boer, c&amp;c General Home Malnte·
Born 3.01, 4·H project. $75;
n011co· Painting, vin~ sld·
to good homo, 17401446·
ing, carpentry, doors, win·
0910 (740)446-4824
dows, baths, mobilo hOme
II( \\ , 1'010 \1 10\
repair and more. For tree
=ii:;;.;;;...~------, estimate call Chot, 740·992·
,.
6323
10
AUTOS
;,;;;.·...,.---~-i

r

roR SALE

I.

·

r

~991 Grand Am, o.tyl. , au· ~
tomatlc, $1 500; t 994 Sat·
urn, Twlncam, 5-speed,
$1800. 93 Escort Wagon,
$1350. (740)38B·9906
-------t994 Plymouth Voyager
needs transmission, other·
wise ln good condition. New
Carpot.
St300 .
·Call
13041675·2131 aHor Spm.
1995 Ford Mustang, V·6,
50,000
mllos,
$5600
17.401446·08B5
't995 M~sublshl 3000 GT,
black, automati c, sunroof,
alarm system, 10 disc CD
changer, remote start. AR
wheels, 39,000 mlloo, runs
&amp; looko groat, St3,500.
.
(740)388·0406
·t 998 Grand Am, 4D, oxcol·
lent condition. $2995; t995
.Monte ClriO, $3995; t995
Skylarll, 2D, $2496; 199B
· Ford
Contour,
$2495 .
We tlkO . Trldlt. COOK
,MOTORS (740)446.0t03
1997 Saturn • $8000

a, 180 mlltl, tour door, IU·
tornatlo, tilt whttl, crulao, In·
ttrmlttonllwlporo,AC,AMIFM
rodlo. Ctll (7101 94D·2112

2002 Elo0tr1 Glide Clanlc
'$18,000.00 849·3004

EucnuCAll

REFRIGfJIAUON

PUBLIC LEGAL
' NOTICE
The Meigs Local
Board of Education
hu completed lis
Genera I
Purpose
Financial Statements
for Fiscal Year ending
June 30, 2002 and
they are available for
public lnapectlon al
th
0 1 th
0 111
e
ce
e
Treasurer, Mark E.
Rhonemui, 320 E.
Main Street, Pomeroy,
OhiO.
.
(11) 15
---------

Residential or commercial
wiring, new service or re·
PubliC Notice
pilrs. Master Licensed elec- _:...:..:.:::.:.::.;.:.:..:;;.:.::__
triclan . Ridenou r Electrical,
NOTICE: Ia hereby
WV000306, 304·675·17B6.
given
that
on
Saturday, November
;:~~[;;~::::l:::::n:::::;; 16, 2002, at 10:00 a.m.,
a public sale will be
held at 211
West
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
parking lot of The
Farmera Bank and
Savlnga Company.
The Farmers Bank and
Savlnga Company Is
·
selling for c . . h In
hand or certified

The

,
.
·
·
:
.

. are ...

; • Electrlctl &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Guttera
1
1 1 • VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
i • Patio and Porch Decks
)

"

01

~...

c y n d 1e

BING6

~

. ..

UIII'S PIIIBIB

•"""""'·
o"~~--.J
_ _..
•..,,.,•.,B,.,,.~

Pomeroy Eagles Club
Sudden Empact Band
PlayingFri. &amp; Sat.
a~12
Bradbury Elementary School

FUND RAISER

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Dool'!i Opell4:30
Early birds start
6:30
1st Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

Mizway Tavern
Karaoke Wed. &amp; Fri.
Sat. Nov. 16th Band
Swam Juice 9·1

1n vau l.lld anil
YIU CIUid 11111111DIIIIr fill£ MIJ
liWOIIIICk II

...

FOIIIIE
IIIFOIIATIDII CIU.

1111111 IIIII
Clm11an11J Ieiiia
IIIIICJ
7 4(1..992·2222 or
. 7 4(1..446-1 018

BISSELL

BUILDERSint

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replac~ment
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

740.84i-2217

Nov.. 16, 6:00 pm
Basket Bingo at the school
Ticket available from stu·
dents &amp; at the door
20 games • 20 baskets
Door prizas, raffles,
50·50

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final E,x penses;
Cancer &amp; Denial,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K RoUovel'!i;
Mortgage; Major Medical
i!J " '
• Nul'!iing Home

.=..

..

Pomeroy ~

a1992·2138.
15

. .

992·6215

Ohio, reserv"l the

c;, o ~nr~~~·iuc•t•

'

..

Free Estimates

Watercraft Jet·Skl
Yama 4984EOOO Motor
No: 65V017666
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings

right lo bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to aale. Further,
The Farmers Bank and
Savlnga Company
reaerves the right to
reject any or all blda.
eubmltted.
The
above
deacrlbed collateral
will be sold "aa Is·
where lo", with no
expressed or lmpUad.
warranty given.
For further lnlorma·
tlon, or for an appoint·
mont io lnapeCI colla!· ,
eral, prior to aale dele

''

V. C. YOUNG Ill

check
the followlngl~~~~~E~J
collateral:
2000 Yamaha GP760Y

Company,

,,·,

~

Remodeling

1

; • New Garage•

'I

.1:~;'

Morning Star Road • CR 30 • Racl111, Ohio
SUmmer 740·992·5232
1·740.94~2115
Sausage made
QihCadeC&amp; Gravely
maplewood

i

1

IIJ£1udtd

Best Service at
the Best Price

I

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~·•

(740) 99H320

74Q-992·6142

·N&lt;c.

·
~aby Grand Plano -'A·t con·
dillon,
must
sacrifice,
$3,600. Cal (740)448-4525

lliFctri&lt;..Piumbing
! IIJIITIIIfn

Call &amp;
Leave message

xt. Cab, $2200. 1740)256·
~91;::40::.__ _ _ __

~ I~

Building ov~r 30 ytars
Footrrs, Foun dacion ,
Add-bns. New Homes .
Pole Barns, Conc~ le.

Delivery

1987 ChOvy Van, mec11anlc
.Pomeranturn Pupptea ready owned Luxury Van (with
.to go November 25, 8 wks work) or wark van, $1200
.ald. 992·3595 Call 4;00· llrm. Kolly (74111446·9961
BOO
:::::..._______ 1994 Ford Taurus . Station
Tennessee Walker thor· Wagon burgundy, 85.000
oughbred Horse, Gelding, miles . Excellent condition,
,12 yrs. old, blacl&lt;, good trail $3900 OBO. (740144t·t029
.horao, gontlo, $t ,500.00
(7&lt;f0) 742·3802 or (740) 69 Chevy Blazor, 4WD,
992·1335
loaded,
172,000 mlloa
··
.
(740)446·7399 or (7401423·
14:;:.!_ _ _ _ _ __
Choc. Lab pupplos 4· :5.::
Males \ 2·Female, Parents 95 Dodge Caravan, ellgh
on Premises w/ Pedigrees damag,e. Good vehicle.
$200.00 (740) 742·3802 or (740)245·5589
(7401 992· 1335

r

FIIILY
CGNmlmGN

DumpTruck

~ 1 Ranger 4X4 , 5-speed,

r

I ILLS

Firewood
for Sale
BALL .
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD

1996 Chevy S·tO, 4 cytin·
~r. 5-speed, S~ver, sport
side bed, AC, $5,500; 2001
CBR 600F41. (740)446·
9769
:.:.::::..._ _ _ __ . 2001 Z-71 EICllmded cab,
~ded , leathor, spray In
.dhner nerf bars, 18,000
miles .
$24,900 .
080.(3041675-4363

=

s·

(7~~')~:7.71~J

.740·992·7996

6954

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Get this AWESOME

J

a er . 740446
ewage,0008ash, . 8 guns; 10 ,22, 25 rount
35
0/Mo.,
·
magazines:
motor
lift.
2 bedroom trailer, $250 Pleasant Valley Apartment (740)992·2816
mon1h, $100 deposit. No Are now taking Applications
t
pes,
on Addl son P'k
' e. fo r 29R,.JBR &amp; 4BR .. /&gt;f&gt;pll·
AN'11QUEli
(740)367-Q102
cations are taken Monday
·1
lhru Friday, from 9:00 A.M.,
2 bedroom, all electric, AC,
very nice, in Gallipolis. 4 PM. Office is Located .at Buy or sell. Riverine Anti·n on'
1151 Evergreen Drive Po1n1 quos t 124 East .. 81
(740)446·2003 or (740)446·
·
IYI
Pleasant, wv Phone No is SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 74o,.
1409
(304)675·5806. E.H.O
992-2526 . Russ Moore,
2 bedroom, Green School.
Tara Townhouse Apart- ~ow_n_e.,.r·--.,---~
Fenced in yard . $335 a
t V
S
.
2
month, $335 deposit. No in· men s, ery paclous,
Carolina Antique &amp; Craft
side pets (740)446·9116
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1 Mall 312 6th St. Pt. Pleas112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, ant WV Antique &amp; Craft
Beautiful River View Ideal Adult Pool &amp; Baby .Pool, Pa- ve~dors Welcome
For 1 Or 2 People, Releren· tio, Start $375/Mo. No Pets,
·
ces, Deposit, .No Pets, FOS· Lease Plus Security Deposit
MrsrnLIANEOUS
ter Trailer Park, 740·441· Required, Days 740·446·
'MEReu•~ .
0181
3481; Evenings : 740-367·
.a&amp;n.&amp;,..,wa:.
. 0502.
•
Clean 3. Bedroom Mobile
35)C53" wood table, entetHome In the Country.
tainmenl center and antique
(740)256-6574
Twin Rivera Tower for eld - chair, $40. Call (740)245·
Mob'l h
erly/ disabled
061 o
..
Ie
orne tor rent, no N- acceptt'ng applt'catt'ons
(740)992 5858
"'"
pets,
•
for 1 br, all utilities paid Firewood , $35 Pickup load,
HUD ·assisted, carpeted split &amp; delivered. (740)367·
~;;Q-A;:~;;;;;;;;
apartment rent is 30% ol 7631 (740)387·7759.
~ur adjuSted income call
304·675-6679 between 8· Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
Repairs. Problems? Need
. . . . 4:30pm weekdays.EHO
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr
~
Unfurnished apartment also 740 -44{?-4525
d 2 b d
1
an
e room apart- small trailer, close to gro·
2 br. In New Havin WV Large Commercial Retail menta, furnished and u.nfur· eery and downtown GalllpoJET
$27,000 304,a82 •2890
Office or Building on 1 to 5 nlshed, security depos1t re- lis. Reference &amp; deposit.
AERATION. MOTORS ,
acreS for aale, rent or lease. qulred, no pets, 740·992· (7 40)446 _1158
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Sqme owner financing avail· 2218
--:--:-.,--.,-----~ Stock Call R E
1
For Sale by owner- 3 bed· bl 1 AI G
-:...:._
'
'
•
·
on vans, •
rooms t batl t 11
a
e.
n
o
rande
area
.
Applications
being
taken
lor
600·637·9528.
1
,
1,
oor Pan,
(740)245-5747 .
, bedroom apartment, stove ~•ry nice 2 bedroom In
carport. 135 Klneon Drive.
&amp; refrigerator Included, utlllt- country aet1ing yet close to -:--:-------~
(740)446·?n6
Olllce space or other pur- lea included. (740)245-5859 town. Washer, Dryor, Stove, Laptop computer with leath.
pose, located at .28 Cedar
er carrying case $200
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre Street. (740)256-6661
1 Bedroom Apartments Frig, Dlsnwasher provided . (74.0)441 ·93H
,
,
tract, $500 down to qualified ,;,op;;;.:;.;;.:;;,;;;.::;:;.:_ _, · Starting al $289/mo, Wash· Large Kitchen . Lots of clos- '::'"":'-~::=.;.:..,..,_--buyers. Call (7401446·3570
Lois &amp;
er/ Dryer Hookup, Slave ol space. Tolal electric with NEW AND USED STEE~
for a quidt sale.
ACREAGE
- and Aetrlge{ator. (740)441· Clnlrii ·AIC. Qam.-ae pletc. Stee l Beams , Pipe Rebar
1519
up and water pro¥kled . Ten· For Concrete, Angle, ChanLand home packages. No
·
ant paye electric. No pets. nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
paym~nts whl!• under con- 112 acre Jot on Tycoon Lake 2 bedroom apar1ment In Non smor.,rs only. $400 de· For Drains, Driveways &amp;
struct1on
Little
or . no w/12)(60Traller$16 ,500.00 · Gallipolis. Air washer, &amp; dry- posit,
$450
month , Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Metdown payment requtred . now $13,500.00
er hook·UP, no pets , water {740)446-9585 or (740)446- als Open Monday: Tuesday
(740)446·3218
· (740) 247·1100 .
paid, $350/mo. plus deposit 2205. 1743 . Centenary Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam~
New 2000 sq ft home, 10 2 t /2
·• d I t
Call after 6pm, (740)446· gRionalrad, Galllpol.ls. Ask tor Vir· 4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
mlnu 188 . tram Hospital
·
acre wo~~ o . 1te 4043 (740)339·3063
T'
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday:
Complete above ground cleared for bulldmg. P.orter
(740)446-7300
area . No Single w1des, 2 ·~mall t~rnlshed apt&amp;. All
SPACE
p~l with pore~, dr~ve~ay $10,500 . ca ll {740)446-4514 utilities paid except Electric .
FOR RENT
New Woodmaster 18~ plaan
garage
oun aton. from8-5
No Pets,1 "'has B sho~er.1 ...._
• nermolder,4yearwarranty
Price bolow appraisal, ::::::.:.::.::;.
· - - - - - has a. tub. Secullty DopoSit
.
leH, dust collector $2700.
(740)446·3384.
~rime lots for sale on State ReqUired. $275. Month. Trailer space for rent $125 080 can be seen at Pt
Goute 554- 1 mile from Rio (~04)675·1365
per month ~ plus deposit . Pleasant Hardware for mor8
401388 0173
Ranch Style Home 3 SA 1.5
2br. Apartment at Gallipolis
InfO call 304·675-8958
TURNED DOWN ON
Batt;) 122 MabeUne Drive,
Ferry. (304)675·2548
Upright Kelvlnator Freezer
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? Gallipolis $69,900.00 Seri·
~~~TE
4 rooms and bath, stove/ reolder mode l. 18.2 Cubic
NoFeeUntessWeWinl
ouslnquiry0nly. 446·7825
-TTI'U'IIr.Lr
frigerator. Utilities paid,
HOUSEIIOIJ)
Foot $80. (3 04)895·3577
1-888·582·3345
$400 month. 45 01i¥e ·
.
~13:.:0.::
4)c;6:,:75:.:6.c.968::__ _ __
Residential Of Commercial, Will pay top dollar for prime Slreet (740)446-3945
Used Queen size mat1ress
1.87 corner lot. 2 story land. New home builder
rl'liijo:;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l Cape Co,d (Redu ced) (740)446·3093
Apartme nt Available Now. Couch &amp; lava seat Blue wf set. (740) 4JI6·0051
HOMES
$89,000. (740)245·9448
RiverBend Place, New Ha· Brown &amp; Beige flowers good Waterline Special : 314 200
FOR SALE
ven, WV now accepting ap- &amp; clean cond . 304-773·5 343 PSI $2 t .OO Per tOO·, t " 200
Wa nted l GoOd credit cus- -~b
· t'
11
1 uuD
P
PSI $35 . ~ Per tOO·, All .
tomers to purchase new te
d. cadIons bord ' J · ·su sib
d
1
ze
•
1
e
roo
m
apart·
For Sale: Reconditioned Brass Com re· sslon Ft'"11 'tngs
14,900, 4 e room , 4 bath home wfl and. $0 down to
· 1· ·
home. Won'1 lastl For list· qualified CI,IStomers. 1_5
ment VUII•es Included all washers, dtyers and retrig · In Stock
304 882 3121
ing callt -800·719-3001 Ext. · acre
tracts
available.
(
)
"
A~~rtment erators. Thompsons Appll·. RON EVANS ENTERPRIS·
F144
(740)446-3093
available tor quahtled se- ance. 3407 Jackson A¥e· ES Jackson, Ohio, 1-BOOJ
n1or/disabled person . EHO
nue, (304)675 -7388_
537-9528

,
1

t

:

I~

BE·UTIFUL
AP··RT
"
,.., •
ME•~s AT BUDGET PRI
"•
''
•
CES AT JACKSON ES·
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $297 to $383 . Walk to
shop &amp; movies . Call 740·
446-2568. Equal Housing

•

BLOCKS. Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
Recommended

I

·. ro
c:

l

r~..__AP._ro_I\RTMENTS_R_RENT
_ __,I~..e.o•._".~--DS-w-·J.

r•o

LOSE WEIGHT
NOW ! Burns FAT!

All NaturaVDoctor

(740)446·2303
1989 GMC Jimmy Looks
and runs good . $1700.,
~MC Sonoma tor fi)C up or
parts. $1500. Pool Table
$200. (304)576·2929
::::::-:;;.:...:.:;..:...::.:.:.:..:.__
t989 Truck, GMC S·t5 4X4
Auto, Extended Gab and
Give/Away 4 yr. old Beagle
Mixed puppy 992 -2735

Rat Terrier ~ 3 Dodge Ram 350

homes under
HOUSES
h I 'th d I'
roR
u.,.......
ep WI · elvfti!.Aj
c 11 H 1 740 38 -,
•
:~48
frOd,
" 5·
.2 bedroom MliH. Wl.ltwrf
1981 Winsor 14 X 70 2 BR. Dryer hoo~·up. Refrigerator,
1 Ba1h w/ garden tub 992· stove fumlshed. $27 5; $150
9672
·
deposit. (740)oWB-9 06 1
used
S3 ! 000
W'll
1
•

JUST launched!!!

I

" llorder Collie Puppies, $tOO
~ &lt;4&gt;arents work cattle, mother
"'lllso clears Canadian Geese
: l740)387·72B7
..
.. .Boston Terrier, 8 weeks old,
.. male black! whitef Brindle
·: $175'. (7401591 ·0861 leave
• message
, •
·
• Full blOOded Cocker Spaniel
: puppies. Black &amp; White and
• Grey &amp; White. Parents on
• premises. Shots. $150.
(740144&amp;2966

Free Yard Sale Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

IH '\ I \I ;-..

12

I

LOST· 2 year Chocolate ~t~i.ns,B~~io ~~~S3Tug~:~~ vldes tho opportunity to do· Po&lt;nt Ploasant, wv 25550
Lab los' In the Northup line December 9. 2002 . liver outpatient counsetlng/ 1140
B• ron.ma::o
area . If found please call The TPRSO is an equalfop- case management to multi·
v~,.~
(740)446-8706 after 4pm.
portunily employer/provider need children, adolescents
TRAINING
and their families. Previous ·
' REWARD:
$25.
set of LOOKING FOR . A FVN expenence
'
keys on 10·t
0·02Lost
at Tu·En·
wor k'tng WI'th Galllpolll Coroer Collogo
die-Wei Park w/ stuffed JOB? THI S IS ITI OFFICE youth a plus.
(Careers Close To Home)
~. 11 T·• 1 740
EN
plush Leopard on them 304·
VIRONMENT 50 POSI - M. ·
I'll
'-'d
•uuay
-448""'~7.
1 bt
675-1314
TIONS AVAILABLE. 1-888·
lnt.lmumacc
depladequa l.1-800-214·0452,
:!::"_ _ _ _ _ __, 974 .JOBS
ta 1ons: gra uae egree 1n
Ren~oo 512748
- -- - - - - - mental health related field
• .,., · •
·
YARD SAJ..J£
EASY WORK!
with knowledge of counsel-~170 .,..•.,,_,. • ......,......
==~=~==~1
EXCELLENT P"YI
lng techniques and psycho.~...~~t.UU:t
~"~
pathology, possession of
Assemble products at home
f h I II .
·
Call Toll Free
one 0 1 8 0 OWing provider
:[2
YARD SALE..
1 800-467 5566 E I 12170 qualifications
required : 4'X8' pool1able new felt, ex·
GALUPOUS
x
LSW, PC, PCC, usw.
cellent condition $300.00
1 ..__llliiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiow Energetic, creative, talented
,
G. E. White/Washer, Large
person needed to inanage Cbrrip~tltlve Salary. Excel- Capacity, 4 yrs.fold $50.00 ·
BIG INSIDE GARAGE new· nightclub which will be lent.fJ!nef!ts include: health, (304) 773-~166
SALE Saturday 16th. and open only · on weekends. dental, v1sion, life Insurance,
Sunday ~7th at old P1ra1es Manager to share revenue paid vacation,·PtJid holidays, Hardwlch stove, LP gas,
:Cove Ba11 Shop In Eureka. aner expenses. No salary. 401 k retirement plan, at'ld Clean &amp; looks good 992.No,rth Route 7 by roller dam. FaK letter of interest to more Send resume and let- 7537
t;IUIIdlng n~ full ot au t~pes (740)286·2660
te~ of interest to: Counselor 80
:O' conect1bles. Ant1que ·
11, Grant Full. Human AeWAN'IED
glassware, p1ctures, mirrors, Flnenclal Fre1dom. Inter- sources Director Tri-County
TO Do
.
S
n t.
I C
.
'
ome Int~mors . ome furni - a 1ona
ompany growmg Mental Health and Counselure and J&amp;welr~. old &amp; new_ rapidly. Internet work from ing Services, Inc., 90 Hospl.
'Come and Chnstmas shop home. PTIFT positions. Full tal Drive, Athens, OH Babysitting, countr~. non)!arly. Also Medium lengtn training. 1·888·202·6321
smoking home with large
45701 . EOE.
Silver fo)( Coat from Chica·
yard, references, (740)643·
~0. Pelts perfectly matched, Foster Parents:
'
Oversize load escort drivers 0161
beautiful, Paid $4,000, ne¥· Local ~~ncy In OhiO seek· needed, tor info. call be· - - - - - - - - )lr worn. Will Open to ot1ers, lng qualified couples to ~· tween 4•9pm evenings Experienced. Medical carebr will trade tor 'nice heav come Foster parents m lea¥e name &amp; number 304 _ Iaker for the elderly &amp; diS&amp;·
'-uty ·wheeler H rr I Do rt Law. renee, Gallla, Jackson, 674•••
bled references., &amp; reason36
... . 4
· u Y
n Me1gs areas. There will be --:::~:::,-::=-====-~=able 304 -773-5284
1n1ss ourl Open Bam· Spm. 5 10 10 families chosen to
. OWNER OPERATORS
~;...:;:;,;,.:,.:.::.:::::.:.___
b
Georges Portable Sawmill,
/lea Markel· Dolls, Angels. e~ome part. of the pilot
WANTED
don't haul your logs to the
.«:ni¥es. lno 1
TRUCK DRIVERS
·ans, handles, project. auali11ed applicants
$
mill jult call304·675·1957.
1ools, trailers. carports, may rece 1ve up to 40.00 Longhaul Teams Welcome.
irents PrOduce, Spring Val· per day reimbursement. Jn. Call (304)675·4005
Will · repair aulomoblles. All
)ey, Open 7 days a week.
teres ted
parties
Call =f'o"in...;t..:Sc;e;.;rv..:lcc;e...;X...;P:.:r•c;ss:___ types of repairs. ASE certi·
{740}709·9062. II vou have
tied, 15 years ex.......~ence.
WANTI:o
prevlou~ly called , please Receptionist wanted IMP. Call (740)441-()199"
TO BUY
call agam.
preferred, people skills,
compu ter &amp; dental back·
·
Full-time RN
ground helpful, remit to AA1 mp;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
'Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Scenic Hills Nursing Center Box 215·D Leon WV 25123.
Sliver, Gold Coins Proof· is now accepting applica· =--.,--.,--.,---,-_...;;.:..:..;.;
Secretary. "--oi()ppoiiiititiiiKilJNJJYiiiiliiititio-"
sets,
Diam on ds, ' Gold tions tor a lull time AN we AeceptlonlsV
~ l ngs .
u .s . Currency,- are the areas premier AJz. Must possess e)Ccellent
'M.T.S . Coin Shop, 151 Sec· helmer's care facility. we of - communication and organi !NOTICE!
ond Avenue , Gallipolis, 740- fer very competitive pay and zational skills. Typing and OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
446·2842.
t)Ccel lent benefits. II you compputler skills larol neces· lNG CO. recommends thai
would like to }oin our dedi· aary. ease app y n person you do business with people
I· \11'11 1\ \II'.._ I
cated team of caregivers, at.
you know and NOT to send
SI· I(IIII S
you may apply In person at Scenic Hilla Nursing Center .money th;ough the mall until
:m:---..;....;;;_.;.;.~ Scenic Hills or call Diane
311 Bucl&lt;ridge Ad.
you have inVestigated the
': 1110
Thompson ·for more inforBldweii,OH45614
oflecing.
HEIJ' WAN'IED
matlon at (740)446·7150 . Scenic Hills Is an ·equal """p..:;.._____.,
'I
• We are an equal opportunity ( opportunity employer.
PROfESSIONAL .
•
employer. EOE
A I
The I
d
SERVICES

r

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

r~ "M~u:~MES

G)

Jackson
manufacturing Truck Drivers, lmmedtJte
plan1
lookinn
for FT hire, class A COL required,
w
administrative
assistant. excellent pay, experience All Nil eatnt lldvertlllng
Responsibilities includo ad· required . Eern up to
In thl• MWipa.-r II
ministratiw support for ac- . $1,000.· por -k.Cilll 304·
IUb)Kt to the F. .rll
counting, customer service
675-4005
Fllr Houalng Act oi1HI
and
HR. Requirements
wlilch mokot It lllogollo
include a high school diplo- URGENTLY
NEEDED· ·
adverttH ..any
ma,
minimum two years plasma donora. earn $50 to
preference, llmltltl;on or
administrative office experi· $60 per week tor 2 or 3
diKrlmiMUon biNd on
ence amf e)Ccellent key- hours woekly. Call Bio Lite
race,·cotor, religion, 111:
boarding and computer Plasma Service, 740·592· famlllllatltua or n1tional
s~Uis. Organization and .6651 .
origin, or any lnttnUon to
strong attentiqn to detail
rnaklany euch
Yet1r11n1 Outreach
are a must. ·
prertrence, limitation or
f.BB8-2·VET NET
Send cover let1er and re· ~eusiness- Public Rei a· diiCrlmlnatlon."
sume with salary history to
HR Mana, ger, One Landy lions•! State &amp; Federally
Regls1ered. Excellent In·
Thll neW.paper wtl not
Lane, Reading, OH 45215
come and Security Some
knowlrigly occepc
or tax to 513-733-9164.
travel required Prefer Vel·
advertlaemenll for real
ealltl!l which II In
Johnsons Supermarket · ol erans/ Vet's Relationship.
vlolaUon or the law. Our
Point Pleasant Is updating se·nct resume to Bus•nessRelatiohs 524
ruderl are Nreby
resumes to Cashier/ Stock. Public
Informed that Ill
Apply within. (304)675-~ 711 Youngstown . Poland Rd.,
Struthers. OH 44471 . Fax _dwellings advtrtlaed In
thll newapaper.,.
The Mason County Public 330·755·5930 Attn: Adam
available on an equal
Service District will accept Dolan Sr.
resumes for an operator poopportunity i&gt;IIMI.
Sition . Minimum require· Wanted : Part-time position
ments are a valid Class I available at a commun~ty
HOMES
West Virginia Public Water group home for people Wllh riO
mental retardat&lt;O
' n 1n Bt'd·
Operator Certllication and
Wl'nbco~ • .,.
Well. H"ours 5-9pm Fri:, 1,---·~;;;;·iii
,.~
Class II West Virginia
9am-7pm S.at. ,· 8am-6pm .
Wastewater Certilica1ion.
Sun. Requirements; High 18 + Acres, woods with
Resumes will be accepted
by mail or in person unlit School Diploma/ GED, valid creek, about 1/2 tillable, 3
December 2, 2002 at 101 driver's license and good bedroom .house, outbuild·
camden Avenue, Pt. Pleas- driving
record. Salary ingS, fruit trees and berries,
ant, wv 25550
$7.00hlr. Send resume to; newer septic system. Phbne
Buckeye Community Serv- (304)882-2359
- - - - - - - - - Ices, P.O. Box 604, JackMcClure's Restaurant now son, OH 45640. Deadline: 2 BD House w/ Fun Basehiring all31ocations, full or 1H18102. Equal Opportunity ment on .38 acre lot in
part-time, pick up appfica- Employer.
Chester Area . For More
Details Cali- Day 985-3301,
lion at location &amp; bring back
between
9:30am · &amp; Work From Home . Could or Evenings 985-4449
10:00am. Monday thru Sat- You Use EXTRA Income? c:...:==:=::.:=....:..:.::...__
urday.
$500 to $1000 per Mo. 3 Bedroom newly remOd·
- - ' - - - - - - - - We'll train you step-by- eled,ln Middleport, call Tom
MENTAL HEALTH
step. Call
(740)446-4208 Andemon after S p.m.
PROFESSIONAL
6pm·Spm, or visit:
992-3348
Excellent opportunity for a www.toyourphyslcalwNith.com :.:::.:::.::._ _ _ _ _ _
qualilied mental health pro·
3 bedroom, 2 bath, open
tessional to join a multi-dis· Someone to clean house . 1 floor plan, Ranch style,
ciplinary team In a commun- day per week: Ref &amp; trans- Approx 1 mile from town •on
ity ment~t health setting. portatlon requ 1red ..Respond SR 588. Appro)C 1500 sq.ft.,
This 40 hour position pto- t~ : EB12 200 Mam Street, $97,900.
(740)983..0730

I

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• Ads Should Run 7 011ys.

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Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre¥1atlons

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To Help Get Response ...
\ \:'\ 4tl \( I \ II·\ I S

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y For Sundeys Paper

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~~3oo_.a~----~o~rF~a=x~l~o~~9=.~~~~15~7~--

Display Ads

TR•.~~
...,

• $11 ,500 Nfl'N $7,815. Oth·
- ers Availablo 1-600·292·
. 0111 .
--.,.-:-.,.---...,-: Block, bric;k, sewer pipes,
.. windows, lintels, etc. Claude
• .Winters, Rio Grande, OH
740-245-5121 .
1991 ~ord Ranger 5 sp.,
l,aw Aider. Tinted Windows,
: .
Prn
A.C. Sharp, Runs Good
:~
FOR SALE
• S2SOO.oo (740) 992·3253

To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
1\.egit)ter
Your Ad,
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

P~per

Bm1liNG

.. All Steel BuHding 50x60 was

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

In Ne xt Day's

: •

'--"""liiiiiiliOil--,.1.
:

In one week With us

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

i

.

.

!URN Fat, BLOCK Crav· t.,.
· . ..-ro~R~Su£~~~
• ngs, and BOOST Energy
t979 Ford F·100 XLT 4X2
: _i1Ce You Have Never E:.Long bed Reg Cab, 302 VB,
_. )Ofionced.
C-6 Automatic GOOd COndi·
•
WEIGHT· LOSS
tion $tSOO.oo 992-7539
REVOLUTION
• \lew product launcn OCto· t979 Ford F1SO, 4WO a~
: oer 23, 2002 . Call Tracy at lift. 400 eng1ne, 33s T~ rn• ( 740)441 ~1982
bird tires, $2000 or trade.

. EJse C~nl

All Display ; 12 Noon 2
Business Deys Prior ·To
Publication
Sundey Display:
Thursday for Sun''"'"

·Advertise
your
-.
business on this

Last Addition" 97 Ford Thunderblrd , VB, 2 Door, fully
loaded, 23,000 Miles, Excel·
lem Condition. 992·3158

IHf St .25 lb. Hanging
~elght.or sale on toot
3041576 ·2ol56
uue Elmo Cookie monster.
~easonable
Price.
304)862-2190

••

No One

Dally In-Column : 1:00 'p .m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

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Meigs,"' Gallia,
And J'lason
Co!Jnties Like

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Of{tee 11o~~

·· =rlday, November 15, 2002

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1·800·822-0417
· W.V's #I Chevy. Pontiac, Buick. Olds
Van Dealer·

DEPOYIAG
PU71
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factoiy Aulhorized
Case· IH Parts
Dealers

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667·0363

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

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•

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

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5 Cry of woe
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·Rio soccer wins; Bevo toumey adion, Bl

Friday, November 15, 2002

ALDER

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Pl Pleasant • November 16, 2001

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

stertor'
23 Sock filler
24 Jalpur
prlnceoo
25 NovellttAmbler
28 Glean
27 Solar wind '
camponsntl
28 Boor
31 Oregon, to
Yvsl1e
33 "Tille Old

42 Ship ftoet
44 Heart oudel
45 Debloro'
notes
46 Winged
VIctory

Another time

U.S., British
planes boinb
Iraqi radar

47 Mo.

expenoe
48 Wonn or
minnow
49 Commu-'
tlf'o home,
for ehort
50 Keota'
works
51 Uvy'o
dozen
54 COI1on gin
name

Sometimes bridge
House"
is made more difficult
network
35 Actor
because you must as· Johnny sess the ability of an .
37 Muse of
. opponent.
.
history
Here is a deal from
40 Snooze
l""""'lll""""'l'!""""
the 2002 Australian
Open Pairs Champi- ·
onship. How should
South plan the play
after his optimistic
jump to six hearts?
West leads a spade in
answer to his partner's two-spade weak
jump overcall.
Given the favorable
vulnerability, I, sitting West, would
have jumped to four
spades over three .
hearts. Presumably.
North would double.
If South passes, it
costs 800 -- more
than a game, but Jess
than a slam.
South ruffed in
hand at trick one,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
drew trumps, and
by Luis Campos
played a diamond to
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by lamoCJs
people, past and present. Each lener In the cipher stahds tor another.
dummy's queen.
Todsy's clue: 8 equals W
Then, though, he took
" R
M C T E E K G
D .E
P T Z R E I
a losing club finesse.
Since declarer still
DEK
PJXUTEG
TEG
XKZKE
had to lose diamond
trick, he went one
OPRCGHKE,
UJN
AN
down.
After the diamond
•
NJHEKG
DJN
NPK
DNPKH
queen wins, declarer
can cash the diamond
B .TS
THDJEG."
ace, take the .spade
·ace, discarding the
CTET
NJHEKH
club jack, ruff dumPREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Dancing Is a sweat job."
my's last spade in
-Fred Astalre
•
hand, and exit with a
"Dance is the hidden language ot the souL"- Martha Graham •
diamond to endplay
WOlD
West. He must either
GlMI ·
lead a club away from
the king or concede a
ruff-and-discard.
However,
that
doesn't work so well
if West started with
MUQROU
king-doubleton of
diamonds.
(East
would win the third
diamond and shift to
18
a club.) True, if West
has that, he should
1
play the king on the
first round of the suit.
"
A y R L 0 1:--~~
A famous author arrived tn
But how many of
-,.......,..--,....:_..;,...~.
court and was sworn in by the
your
opponents
r
j 5 16 I I
court bailiff, "Do you solemnly
would do that? IL--J.-.1...--1.'---L.---l_ swear to tell as much of the truth
Maybe South, after r _ _....:__ _ _ ____, in court as you would in - - - the diamond finesse
F RA 0 L E
?"
.
works, should cash
7
i;-Complete the chuckle quoled .
the spade ace, ruff the L.-I...-.I.L..-.J.-..1.-..1..---!.
by filling in the miss1ng words ~
· you develop from ~tep No. 3 below.
last spade, and lead a diamond toward the
@ PRINT NUMBERED
dummy. If West
LETTERS IN SQUARES .
weakly plays thejack,
declarer has no problem; but if West correctly rises with the
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
king (the .card he is
. Caddie - Graph - Ebony- Ossify- SPEEDING~ .
known to . hold},
The
teen had gotten several traffic tickets so ·when·
South ' is back to
he came home with one more his irate father scoldec ,'
where we came in -"There
is more to life than increasing it's SPEEDING!"
to duck or not to
duck . .

~~~~~~ ~~=:.:====.:~~~!!!!!!!!:::!=:!;:-:l;_~~:::_:S:d!ia~:__j ·
BARNEY

FER TH' SCHOOL
~ENTSHOW!!

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VES, MA'AM .. WELL, SINCE
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DISAPI'OtNTMe+li

Re-enactors, such as these, will set up camp at Fort Randolph this weekend to reenact the 17th century battle of the Siege
. of Aberdeen that took pace in England during the Scots Wars. (Fort Randolph website)

-:English Civil.War re-enactment
sets up camp at Ft. Randolph
display life similar to the way it was in century armies of the English civij wars.
Staff writer
a besieged city I SO years ago.
.
The society consists of two armies,
The fort will be • ¢'mplete with based on the actual sides that fought in
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. _ It will Trader's Row. Camps will be outside the conflict, the King's Army
look as though time has moved back- the fort, with sutlers (retailers) set up (Cavaliers), who fought for King
Charles I to preserve the traditional
inside the fort.
. The re-enactment is being sponsored government in church and state, and the
wards at Fort Randolph this weekend.
. More than SO 17th century re-.enac-- by Col. HeJjl)' Tiller's Regiment of Foot Army of Parliament (Roundheads), that
tors from all over the eastern half of the of the English Civil War Society and the rebelled against the monarchy, seeking
United States will be portraying life in Fort Randolph Committee at the recon- radical changes in religion and economthe 1600s today and Sunday, the same .~tructed Fort Randolph site, Krodel ic policy as well as a greater share of
· .
·national power.
time period as when the Pilgrims first . Park in Point Pleasant.·
It is the first time: 9tat this time period......•.'J'he armies consist of regiments,
settled in America.
The units · will reermct the siege of has ever been presented anywhere in the so!ne locally based, while others have,a
.
witler distribution.
Aberdeen, a battle related to the Sr:ots area.
Wars of the English Civil War period, at · The English Civil War Society of
Each regiment l)as a distinct identity
. 2 p.m. today and 11 a.m. Sunday.
America is a non-profit organization based on an original English Civil War
They will al~o be demonstrating mili- dedicated to the researching and accu- regiment. These regiments would have
tary drills. maneuvers, fencing, massed rate portrayal of the Royalist and been funded by gentlemen of some subpike , musket and sword skirmishes Parliamentary armies, which fought stance. The modern counterpart relies
throughout the day. All activities will between 1639 and 1651.
.
.
upon the skills, ingenuity and self-suffibegin at I0 a.m. each day.
·
. The society js run and organized in a c1en~y of tts members for tis economtc
All actors will be in period clothing. military fashioh by volunteers, based stabthty.
They will set up camp on the site and upon the historical structure of the 17th
The event is free to the public.
BY IV.NDY BOYCE

:Memorial race to honor Thomas
Proceeds to benefit
scholarship·fund

Memorial Scholarship
Fund, to provide academic scholarships
for
Meigs
High
·
School
graduates
who
BY BRIAN J. REED
participate
·
in
track
Staff writer
and field and cross
country.
POMEROY, Ohio - Meigs High
The race is titled
School cross-country team and athletic
after a story about a
boosters will sponsor a memorial SK
young woman sufferThomas
road race on Nov. 30, to honor their late·
mg a terminal illness,
ieammate, Brandi Thomas.
who asked to be
Thomas, an avid track and field ath- buried with a fork in . her right hand.
lete, died in September in art automobile When asked by a rabbi why she wished
to be. buried in such a way, she said it
accident.
The "Keep Your Fork" SK race will was because she had always been told
·f'aise funds for the Brandi Thomas to keep her fork at dinners and socials.

Index
Saturday, Nov. 16, 2002
Bv ·BERNICE BED£ OsoL

There will be ample oppor-

GARFIELD
~AV£ YC\1 &gt;:1/rR. \1AD ,....__._,

tunities for entering into new
ventures or eh1erpr1ses in the

year ahead, but if you find
you need a partner, be sure to
choose one wtiose mellle has
already beeri tested.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov
22) -- A larger workload than
you anticipated may be
foisted upon yo u today . However, keep a good ani tude and
keep plugging away. What
you accomplish will be the
source of great pride. Trying
to patch up a broken romance? The Astrograph
Matchmaker can help you understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mail
$2 .75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 167,
Wrckliffe. OH 44092. ·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- Things will turn
out lu ckier for you today
when you handle things yourself instead of allowing another to lay out your game
plan. Follow your thinking

i

A CII~E. oF

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•
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THE GRIZZWELLS

I ALMO!IT
CAllGH1' YOU!

w henever you can.

CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- What starts out looking
like a bum deul could turn out

- ·

'

to be a profitable develop:
· ment for you, II may be best ,
to let events run the1r natural
courses today . nnd see where

they lead.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Try not to get locked

into preconceived nOtioris today. Information of consider-

able value will be revealed
only' from free-flowing exchanges.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20·-March
20)-- Trying Ia hop a ride on
someone else's wagon will

fizzle on you today. However,
personal gains have excellent

chan c:es for success when
you' re prep~red to earn them.

ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
-- You might be forced to
make alterations today · on

something that means a lot to
you, but don't get upset. The
options available to you are

likely to be better than your

original concept.

TAURUS (Apri l 20-May
20) -- Should you find yourself hampered by roadblocks
or opposition ·today. rely on
your mgenuity or intuition to

find your way around -them.
Chances are they 'II get you
out of the squeeze.
GEMIN I (May 21-June 20)
-- Even, when it appears as if

ter's. th at really mean some- ·

thing to you, such as in ftm!ncial deahngs.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Turn the other cheek today
should someone who -is not
getting his/her way get a bit
hostile with you. By main- .
taining your dignuy, all
within earshot will sjde with you.
VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22) .
·~

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries ·

Sports
Weather

A2,5-6

. 83-5

BY BRIAN

86

Staff writer

~3

A4

A3
A3
Bl -3
A2

Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

J.

REED

'

RUTLAND , Ohio - A Rutland
man appeared in Meigs County
Court Thursday · on an arson
charge, accusing him of a fire that
de stroyed hi s parents' / Rutland
storage building.
David Andrew Cleland, 18,

person.

.

Ll BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - If your decision about a per- _

·.
BY lAWRENCE

J.

report filed Sept. 16,
Bumgarner was responding to
a complaint lodged by
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. William Cochran, Buskirk's
-The breakdown in commu- neighbor on Sunset Lane off
nication that ted to the fatal Sandhill Road, about an
shooting of a Rotweiler last apparent vicious dog in his
September prompted . the yard.
Mason County Commission
After Bumgarner arrived at
to review the way "vicious" Cochran's · residence and
dog complaints are handled .
found Lady not present, he
Sherry
Clatworthy · proceeded to Buskirk's resiaddressed the commission dence.
· Thursday about the shooting
Upon receiving no response
of Lady _
her son Jamie to knocks on the front door,
Buskirk 's
4-year
old Bumgarner went to the side of
Rotweiler _ by sheriff's the house to look inside tlie
Deputy W.)C Bumgarner 011 kennels Buskirk constructed
for Lady and another
Sept. 9·
R
Clatworthy, who worked as ottwet'Ier, Brutus. After not
a secretary in the sheriff's finding
Lady
present,
department from 1997 10 Bumgarner began to return to
2000, was unequivocal in say- his cruiser when Cochran
ing the matter was something yelled to Bumgarner the dog
outside the scope of the sher- was coming at him.
As Lady was coming to
iff's department.
"I think the deputies should BumgartJer "at a full run . ...
stick to law enforcement and growling,
barking
and
leave dog calls to the dog chomping its jaws," he pulled
·warden," Clatworthy said.
his weapon, firing first when
According the official
Please see Shooting. All
SMITH

Staff writer

.

"

appeared before Judge Steven L.
Story on a complaint filed by
Donald Eifler, an inve stigator for
the Ohio Fire Marshal.
He is accused of setting fire to a
storage building owned by his parents, Sylvan and Linda Cleland of
Salem Street.
"Eifler's investigation determined Cleland was responsible for
setting tj:!e fire, causing $7SO worth

of damage," a new s release is sued
Friday afternoon by the Ohio Fire
Marshal 's office said. "There were
no injuries." ·
"The fire was found to have
started inside the shed, in close
proximity to the Cleland house and
a liquid propane gas tank." ·
He pled ·innocent to the c~arge, a
fourth-degree felony, and remains
in the Noble County Jail on a

·tiolzer Home Care • Holzer Hospice . • Holzer E~tra - Care
•
. 2881 State Route 160 - Gallipolis
Office tours, information, refreshmenis and

doubtful about chanj!ing your

-·---·----'---------------~----------

Lethal·shooting
of dog leads to
changes in policy

· $10,000 bond. Story appointed
Pomeroy attorney John L.entes to
represent Cleland.
· C::leland faces a penalty of up to
18 months in jail and a $5,000 fine,
if convicted.
·
Deputy Scott Trussell said an
indictment may be forthcoming
against Cleland, although the
investigation is under the direction
of the fire marshal.

Wednesday, November 20
1 PM- 3 PM

sona l maHer iSn't turnin~ out
as you envisioned, p,on t be :

game plan in madstream.
:your .second thoughts are
likely to be your wise:)t ones.

z o n e s
would be
co nsidered
a trigger for
a
wider
U .S.-Ied
attack.
,
Coalitidn
planes used
precisionguided
.
Bush
weapons to
attacR an
"air defense ·
communications
facility"
near
An
Najaf about
8S
miles
southeast of
Baghdad, a
Pentagon
Rumsfeld · state merit
said. The
strike happened at about 2:SO
p.OJ. EST.
There were previous strikes
on Sunday against two surface~to-air missile sites ne~~f
Tallil, 17S miles southeast l'lf
Baghdad.

to celebrate National Home Care and Hospice Month

Joint ventures may not be

all they promise to be today.:
Should you see this to be true, •
back out gracefully. You'll be :
far luckier being your own

"I know that something better was
coming," the woman said.
"The next time you reach down for
your fork , let it remind you that the best
is yet to come," goes the moral of the
story.
The race will begin at II a.m. at
Meigs High School, and will end there.
The entry fee is $16, and the first 7 5
entrants will receive a T-shirt. Prizes
will be awarded in various age groups
in both male and female categories, and
plaques will be awarded.
Children urider 18 must have parental
permission to participate. Information
about registration is available from
Cross Country Coach Mike Kennedy, at
992-7SS2 or'992-3058.

WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. and British warplanes
bombed a radar site in southem Iraq Friday after Iraq fired
at warplanes patrolling a nofly zone, the Pentagon said.
It was the first coalition
strike on Iraq since Saddam
Hussein's government accept. ed the U.N. Security Council
resolution demanding that he
disarm and allow inspectors
to search for chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
President Bush and other
· U.S. officials have said they
believe that Iraq's tiring on
coalition planes patrolling the
northern and southern no-fly
zones would violate the latest
U.N. resolution.
Pentagon . spokesman Lt.
Col. David Lapan said Friday
evening that Iraq had fired
surface-to-air missiles and
anti-aircraft artillery at coalition planes..
Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld and other
Pentagon officials have been
vague about . whether Iraqi
hostile actions in the rio-fly

Meigs County man charged with arson

2 SiK:lJons '- 12 P818S
everything is gmng against
you today, remain hopeful about the eventual outcome .
Lady Luck will intervene at
the appropriate time,
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Although all of your affairs
might not go exactly as you
would like them to today,
you'll be quite lucky in mat-

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 13

FREE health screenings will be oHered.
For more

Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer
.org
.
.
•

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